The creature requests Victor to create a female companion for him, as he feels lonely and wants a companion who understands him. He believes that having a mate will alleviate his loneliness and give him a sense of belonging.
Mary Shelley's novel "Frankenstein" ends with Victor Frankenstein dying and the creature mourning his death. The creature expresses remorse for the pain he caused Victor and seeks redemption by taking his own life. This resolution highlights the destructive consequences of Victor's ambition and the tragic nature of their intertwined fates.
Dr. Victor Frankenstein created the Creature. The Creature is often mistakenly called Frankenstein, when he is really more accurately called Frankenstein's monster. The novel "Frankenstein" was written by Mary Shelley.
In Mary Shelley's "Frankenstein," Victor Frankenstein is surprised to encounter the Creature he created while he is on the glacier. Instead of feeling fear or anger, Victor is struck by the Creature's tragic and desolate appearance, which elicits a mix of horror and pity within him. This encounter highlights the profound consequences of Victor's actions and the emotional turmoil both he and the Creature experience.
Victor Frankenstein created his creature to be 8 feet tall because Mary Shelley simply decided to describe the creature/monster to be this way. Other reasons would be that the creature is possibly made of many other bodies.
The main characters in "Frankenstein" by Mary Shelley are Victor Frankenstein, the scientist who creates the monster, and the Creature, the monster that Victor brings to life. Other characters include Elizabeth Lavenza, Victor's fiancée; Henry Clerval, Victor's friend; and Robert Walton, the ship captain who writes letters to his sister recounting Victor's story.
Frankenstein's mother, William, Justine, Henry Clerval, Elizabeth, Frankenstein's father, Frankenstein, the monster
Mary Shelley is not the name of the book but the name of the author of such books as Frankenstein and The Last Man. The rest of this answer assumes that we are talking about the novel Frankenstein. The duty in the book is shared with both Victor's and Captain Walton of the ship that takes him in at the start of the novel Also the creature has a chapter or two where he is the narrator.
The first, male monster saw Victor destroy the female creature.
In Mary Shelley's "Frankenstein," the creature's first crime occurs when he murders William Frankenstein, Victor Frankenstein's younger brother. This act is driven by a combination of rage and heartbreak after the creature is rejected and scorned by humanity, including Victor. The murder symbolizes the creature's deep sense of isolation and his desire for revenge against his creator for abandoning him.
In Mary Shelley's "Frankenstein," Victor Frankenstein imagines that the creature he has created will attack Elizabeth Lavenza. He fears that the creature, seeking revenge for Victor's abandonment and the misery it has endured, will target Elizabeth as a means to hurt him. This dread ultimately drives Victor to take precautions to protect her, but tragically, his efforts come too late.
People often refer to the creature as "Frankenstein," a common misconception stemming from Mary Shelley's 1818 novel "Frankenstein; or, The Modern Prometheus." In the story, Victor Frankenstein is the scientist who creates the creature, but he does not name it. The term became popularized in various adaptations and media, leading to the confusion that the creature itself is named Frankenstein.
William Frankenstein was Victor Frankenstein's younger brother.