Zachary Tew Miss Sibbach Honors English IV 11 December, 2015 Is Victor Frankenstein Like God? In Frankenstein Victor plays the role of God with the creation of the creature. Victor studies for years about the dead to see how new life works. He creates life from the dead with his studies of electricity. Victor creates life but does not support the creature or teach it how to become civilized which causes death to one's Victor love. The making of Creature is an unlikely scenario because in Christian beliefs only God can create life. At the age fifteen Victor made a discovery that changed his life. He saw how lightning has the power of destruction when a huge tree around his house is demolished by a lightning strike. After seeing this it confirms …show more content…
When Victor arrived to the gates of the city, they are closed for that night and in between the lightning strike he saw a glimpse of the monster. He realizes that it had been two years since he had last seen his terrible creation. It came to him after that his creation had strangled his little brother. Victor knowing Creature killed his brother still does not reveal the source of the crime to the justice system, because he did not want it to fall back on him that he created this monster. He later learns that Justine now accused of the murder of little William. Justine gets prosecuted and killed because Victor too scared keeps his mouth shut than to reveal his creation than to save an innocent …show more content…
“Victor sets about his work, creating a second female monster. After following Victor and Henry through mainland Europe and England, the monster comes near Victor's workshop in Scotland to see his mate. In a fit of anger and guilt, Victor destroys the half-finished creation in front of the monster and tells the monster he will not continue. The threat the monster makes an ominous one: “I shall be with you on your wedding-night." The monster then disappears into the night.”(Glance) Victor agrees to and gathers all the parts to complete this action, and when he almost done and about to bring her to life Victor refuses. Victor told the Creature that he will not create another being such as him. Victor disposes of the body parts into the ocean. This makes the creature upset and storm away, When Victor returns to one of the islands. He gets brought in and blamed for a murder on the beach. Victor soon finds out that the man Henry Clerval his best friend, and the same hand marks are around his neck just like on his little brother William. This leading to the fact that the creature had striked again out of anger and killed his best friend. Victor's father comes and bails him out and proves his innocence, his father then gave him a letter from Elizabeth. Saying she was wanting to know if Victor wanted to settle down with
He eventually gets it to come alive and it scares him so much that he leaves his apartment. Henry shows up and they go back to the apartment, but the monster is gone. Victor then becomes sick thinking about his family and the monster. A letter comes from Elizabeth that makes Victor feel better.
Victor denied the monster it’s power by not allowing it to have what it asked for. This refusal caused the monster declare it’s dominance through threatening Victor to do as it says or he will be punished. After Victor refuses to allow his creation to take control, it goes mayhem and reacts with hatred. The creature tried to gain it’s power by deteriorating Victor’s life killing many of the friends and loved ones close to Victor. This pulls the final straw for Victor, he attempted to hunt the monster down and destroy it before it could hurt anyone else.
The Creation promptly approaches Victor with a request for a companion and utilizes his sob story to convince Victor. Victor answers in agreement, stating, “...I concluded that the justice due both to him and my fellow creatures demanded of me that I should comply with jos request” (159). It illustrates the Creature's ability to take advantage of Victor’s guilt while also showing Victor’s mental health growing extensively vulnerable as he continues to withhold information of the Creation’s existence. In preparations for creating the Creation’s companion, Victor goes overseas, accompanied by his friend, Henry Clerval. However, Victor comes to understand the underlying implications of creating another creation.
With this in mind, God can be viewed as an all powerful being who can easily conjure humans into existence, while providing a set of moral beliefs to ensure a prosperous life. Based upon this definition of God, Victor’s pursuit in creating life may at first resemble acts of God; but, much like a chair missing a leg, Victor’s overpowering creature, ordinary abilities, and lack of influence over his creation falls short of the qualifying aspects of a
At what point does the price of secrecy become too high to pay? In most cases, secrets destroy relationships and lives. However, a kept secret can be to the benefit of others in certain situations. In Mary Shelley’s, Frankenstein, Victor believes he is doing exactly that for his family when he keeps the monster a secret. In addition to that, Victor is also trying to protect himself from the opinions of everyone around him.
Victor realizes that he has lost control of the monster’s actions and regrets not taking the proper precautions in seizing the monster when he has the opportunity. Ultimately, Victor is victimized. After the murder of Elizabeth, Victor reflects on the deaths of his loved ones and says, “The death of William, the execution of Justine, the murder of Clerval, and lastly of my wife; even at that moment I knew not that my only remaining friends were safe from the malignity of the fiend” (174). Victor suffers watching his loved ones die one by one, yet lacking the ability to save them. Overall, Victor’s victimization is due to his timorousness dealing with his initial
Later on Justine is accused of a killing victor’s brother and she didn’t do it so she goes through a trial and they decide to kill her. At the end the monster kills Victor’s wife named Elizabeth because he is angry that victor wouldn’t create a companion for him. The monster learns to speak and read from the people. He would listen to them speak and he would watch them all day. He later began to understand what they were saying.
Victor is petrifies by the thought of his creation. He is even more terrified that Henry might discover his existence. victor is horrified to the level where the only concern on his mind is the ‘Monster’ and keeping it a secret, although he is sick. Vicor is so worried about keeping the monster a secret that he won’t concern himself about Henry’s troubles It is relevant to the book as a whole due to the constant and repetitive secrecy of the monster from others leading Victor to avoid anyone’s thoughts and concerns about him, leading himself to feel lonely and only worried about his creation. Victor conceals the monster’s existence a secret from anyone around him by making up lies and excuses.
Is Victor the Ruling God? One does not simply “play God” in this world, that role is more than just a dress up and act thing. Many people say that Victor in the novel Frankenstein tries to “play God” which is absolutely true. As the novel progresses the characteristics of the creator “playing God” become more obvious to the eye of the reader. Victor “plays the Lord” when he creates the creature, when he decides what to do with the orders of the creature, and when the monster creates the connection when reading the book Paradise Lost.
Master to Misery In the fictional novel, Frankenstein by Mary Shelley, there is a main character named Victor. Victor had a vision of creating life in an inanimate object. He succeeded at creating life, but throughout the novel he was slowly pushed out of the role of the master. There are a few things that contribute to Victor being under authority rather than being the authority.
The creature wants to take revenge on Victor for abandoning him and causes Victor grief by killing the people he cares about. When the creature kills, Victor feels responsible and guilty of the murders. He continually breaks down with each death by “his” hands, which makes him go mad. The task of creating a monster turned Victor into a monster
Victor is almost finished with the companion and as he looks at it he states he begins “trembling with passion” and “tore to pieces the thing on which [he] was engaged (Shelley, 154).” The creature then seeks out Victor and says, “‘I have endured incalculable fatigue, and cold, and hunger; do you dare destroy my hopes? (Shelley, 155)’” Victor and the creature resemble a parent taking away an item that makes the child happy. The child (creature) then asks the parent (Victor) why the parent doesn’t wish their child to be happy because said item is the only thing that bring joy to the child.
ENGB220 FINAL ESSAY Tracy Tou Ka Man A-B2-2129-1 1. In your opinion, who is the hero of Frankenstein: Victor Frankenstein or the monster? Why? How did Mary Shelley influence your choice (you may discuss the ways she reveals her characters)?
A writer named Nikita Gill once said “When you see a monster next, always remember this. Do not fear the thing before you. Fear the thing that created it instead.” This quote can be related to the novel Frankenstein where instead of the actual creature being perceived as the monster, the person who created it deserves to be called one. Using the archetypal lens, Victor can be seen as the real monster in Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein from his cruel characteristics, continuous patterns of monstrosity, as well as symbols and themes involving nature.
He sets off to bed. In the morning, the monster is gone, and Victor is a bit worried because the loss of his experimentations. Victor's brother, William is murdered. One of Victor’s friends takes the blame, but tells Victor she did not do the crime. She is later executed for taking blame.