The creature tells Victor that he expected this kind of behavior from him and offers Victor a deal. If Victor accepts the deal, the creature will leave mankind alone, but if Victor does not accept, the creature will murder all of Victor's friends and family.
Frankenstein is a novel that was written by Mary Shelley about the scientist Victor Frankenstein.
In the novel 'Frankenstein,'Victor was held in prison for two months before he had a visitor. The visitor was Victor's father.
Victor Frankenstein Remember- Frankenstein is the creator not the monster!
New criticism just analyzes a text for its structure rather than looking for historical or biographical meaning. So Mary Shelley constructed the novel by having: section for the Walton, then Victor's story, then the creature, then Victor again, and then ended with Walton. In a way one can say she did this to give the readers different perspectives on what actually happened, ie with the the point of view of the creature we actually start to feel compassion for him.
Through the interference of his adopted cousin, Elizabeth, Henry Clerval (Victor's childhood friend) accompanies Victor to England. Frankenstein's primary motive for the trip is to converse with the country's "most distinguished natural philosophers" to aid in his creation of a mate for the Monster.
Frankenstein's mother, William, Justine, Henry Clerval, Elizabeth, Frankenstein's father, Frankenstein, the monster
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.
Read the book! Victor Frankenstein is not a doctor. He was born and raised in Geneva Switzerland. He went to the University of Ingostadt in Switzerland where he creates the "monster". At this time, Victor is a student of "natural philosophy", which involves chemistry and other science. Also of note: Victor Frankenstein is the creator of the monster, which is called the "creature" for much of the time in the novel. The creature has no name.
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.
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.
Frankenstein is a novel that was written by Mary Shelley about the scientist Victor Frankenstein.
Frankenstein, the name often erroneously attributed to The Monster, or The Creature, is actually the doctor who created him. Victor Frankenstein is a young brilliant doctor from Switzerland (NOT Transylvania) who becomes fixated with the idea of creating life in the laboratory. Although the movies would have you believe that he used lightning and a lot of weird apparatus, the novel is vague about the methods, and even the materials used.
Elizabeth Lavenza is a character in Mary Shelley's novel Frankenstein. She is Victor Frankenstein's adopted sister and eventually becomes his fiancée. Elizabeth represents purity, goodness, and domesticity in contrast to the dark and destructive aspects of the novel.
The monster in Mary Shelley's novel is simply referred to as "Frankenstein's monster" or "the creature." The name "Frankenstein" actually belongs to the scientist who created him, Victor Frankenstein.
Victor (he was a scientist not a doctor)Victor Frankenstein is a Swiss fictional character the protagonist of the 1819 novel Frankenstein.
No, Victor Frankenstein does not tell his friend Henry Clerval about the existence of the creature. Throughout the novel, Victor keeps the creature a secret, fearing the consequences of revealing his actions and the horror he has unleashed. His guilt and shame prevent him from confiding in Henry, which ultimately isolates him further and exacerbates his turmoil.
a monster or large creature