The Real Monster In Mary Shelley's Frankenstein

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The real monster in Frankenstein While scientists pursuing the progress of science today, it would be good if they do it for the benefits of human race. However, if their desires for scientific discovery are caused by their selfish ambition, and they do not take responsibility of them if fail, their creations might become threats for human. As an example of Frankenstein, written by the English author Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley, tells the story of a young science Victor Frankenstein who creates a grotesque creature in a scientific experiment, and that cause the tragedy for the rest of his life and the death of many innocent people. When people read this book, many of them might see the creature as a monster as the fact that it has a horrible …show more content…

When the creature was brought back to life, it was like an infant. It only has the basic sensations, “I felt light, hunger, and thirst, and darkness” (74). The creature is not born evil. It was called monster simply because it has an awful appearance. Although the creature is monster outside, it has a benevolent heart inside. As the creature learns language from the cottagers, it starts to read. After it absorbs knowledge from the books, it despises killing. “When I heard details of vice and bloodshed, my wonder ceased and I turned away with disgust and loathing” (84). The creature’s attitude shows readers that it is not a slayer at the beginning. Also, the creature says, “I admired virtue and good feelings and loved the gentle manners and amiable quantities of my cottagers” (84). It is obvious that the books and kind cottagers shape the creature into a humanized being. Besides, the act of saving a drowning girl from a precipitous river indicates that the creature is actually a good being. However, people never try to look under its ugly appearance. When the creature proceeds to a village, where people attack it. Felix, one of the kind cottagers, drives the creature away immediately at the first sight of it. The man who plays with the drowning girl shoot the creature when it approaches to them. After all these rejections, the creature’s world falls …show more content…

Before Victor created the creature, he called himself father of it. Surprisingly, Victor decides to abandon his “child” at the first sight of its ugly appearance. He appears to be relentless because he abandons a creature who has no ability to live alone. The creature is just “born”, and it even does not how to speak. It is like an infant except it is huge and it can walk. As its creator, Victor has the responsibility to take care of it since it has life now. However, Victor just leaves it alone. Interestingly, he takes two years to create his “son”, and one second to desert it. Eventually, it is the abandonment of the creature leads to death of his brother. When the creature encounters Victor again, it narrates its miserable experience to Victor, and asks Victor to create a female monster which is its only chance to be happy. For the first time, Victor feels sympathy for it, and responsibility to the creature. “I was moved. I shuddered when I thought of the possible consequence of my consent, but I felt that there was some justice in his argument … and did I not as his maker owe him all the portion of happiness that it was in my power to bestow” (100). Victor consents the creature’s requirement of creating a female monster which seems to be his compensation to the creature.

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