Sadly, Yes. Victor's soon-to-be Wife Elizabeth is murdered just before the couples' wedding night. Elizabeth is killed by the monster (frankenstien's creation) and when Victor returns home to tell his father, he finds his dad on his death bed only a few days later.
Victor's mother dies by catching the scarlet fever that she helped Elizabeth get rid of.
Well, honey, in Mary Shelley's "Frankenstein," the big guy himself, Victor Frankenstein, bites the dust. But let's not forget about the real tragedy here - poor old Frankenstein's monster, who meets his maker in the end too. So, grab some tissues and prepare for a double dose of death in this classic tale.
Yes, Frankenstein does complete his monster, but he leaves the creature out to die since he was not an angel like he thought he would be! So, Frankenstein's monster goes after Frankenstein, his creator, and tries to kill him. But, in the end of the story, he kills himself!
William Frankenstein- the creator not the monster's sonJustine Moritz- the Frankensteins' maid servantHenry Clerval- Frankenstein's best friendElizabeth Lavenza- Frankenstein's brideAlphonse- Frankenstein's fatherVictor Frankenstein himself dies
In the book by Mary Shelly, the Frankenstein monster does not die; it dissapears into the arctic and is never seen again.In the movies the monster usually dies in a fire, either started by someone else to kill him, or started accidentally by himself.
In the Wordsworth Classics edition of "Frankenstein," Victor Frankenstein's mother dies when he is 17 years old. Her death is a significant moment in the story, as it contributes to Victor's sense of loss and grief that propel him into his obsessive quest for creating life.
Frankenstein's mother, William, Justine, Henry Clerval, Elizabeth, Frankenstein's father, Frankenstein, the monster
Victor's mother dies by catching the scarlet fever that she helped Elizabeth get rid of.
Well, honey, in Mary Shelley's "Frankenstein," the big guy himself, Victor Frankenstein, bites the dust. But let's not forget about the real tragedy here - poor old Frankenstein's monster, who meets his maker in the end too. So, grab some tissues and prepare for a double dose of death in this classic tale.
Ernest is Victor Frankenstein's younger brother and William is their youngest brother. Ernest was with William the night he was murdered by the creature that Victor created.
Victor's dad, Alphonse Frankenstein, dies in Chapter 37 of Mary Shelley's novel "Frankenstein".
The lovely Elizabeth, adopted by the Frankenstein family, contracted Scarlet Fever. Though Mrs. Frankenstein was made aware of the possible danger to her own health, "when she heard that her favourite was menaced," she continued to care for Elizabeth. Thus she contracted the Scarlet Fever and died while Elizabeth lived and went on to marry Victor only to be killed by the monster later in the novel. You could also say that since Victor's creator died, he- as the creator of the monster- must also die.
Doctor Victor Frankenstein - of exhaustion on the ice-bound ship at the arctic circle. Of course it is inferred that the monster is to die a lonely death as well but that doesn't happen within the chronology of the book.
Her mother died in 1948 when Victor was 12 years old.
In the book the monster doesn't die. And I don't know who Walker is.
Caroline Beaufort dies of scarlet fever, which she contracts from Elizabeth, just before Victor leaves for Ingolstadt.
He died when Dr. Frankenstein's lab exploded.In the original book the monster didn't die, merely took himself way to the 'farthest shore.' In the movies he has died several different ways. In the original movie he was burned to death in a wind-mill.The monster dies, in the book, after killing himself with the corpse of Victor. He kills himself on a pyre (a pile of burning material, especially a pile of wood on which a dead body is ceremonially cremated).If you read the book, you will know that the creature never died. The characters that died were Victor's mother, his brother William Frankenstein, his friend (and servant of their house) Justine Moritz, his friend Henry Cerval, his wife Elizabeth Lavenza, and Victor Frankenstein (the protagonist). Most of which, besides his mother, were either killed by the monster or because of something he did.