In Mary Shelley's "Frankenstein," the monster shows remorse and grief upon discovering Victor's dead body. He acknowledges the part he played in Victor's demise and expresses regret for the pain he has caused. Ultimately, the monster is left feeling lonely and bereft, as Victor was one of the few connections he had in the world.
he is afriad that the monster will kill his co workers
The monster directly murders three people: Henry, Elizabeth, and William But he is also the cause of Justine's death when he frames her for the murder of William. And he is also somewhat responsible for the death of Victors father, who dies from grief because the monster killed most of his family.
How do polish react when the death of their partner occurs
As with all 19th century literature it is long on description, setting and philosophy - many people now-a-days find that boring and hard to get through. You have to approach it with the attitude that it will require 'slow and careful' reading, not something that today's literary body is willing to do. If you can 'get-by' that or (like more elite readers) can appreciate it, then yes, it is quite in-depth and provocative.
he seeks knowledge through the thirst he had in science. He studied a lot of Nature in science which lead to the creation of the monster
No, but he lost his last battle, so the only people to write about him were trying to suck-up to the descendants of his victors. Shakespeare wrote of him as a monster because his monarch, Queen Elizabeth 1, was a granddaughter of Richards' enemy.
theseus reaction to phaedra death
As an uncontrollable entity
he is gay
The Victors - film - was created in 1963.
Victors FC was created in 2001.
Jan Victors died in 1676.