Saturday, July 20, 2019
Mary Shelleys Frankenstein - Victor Frankenstein is to Blame Essay
Victor Frankenstein is to Blame        Can an  intense appetency for the pursuit of knowledge result in fatal consequences? In  most situations when a strong desire is present consequences are seldom taken  into consideration. In the novel, Frankenstein, Victor Frankenstein pursues  knowledge in an obsessive manner that blinds him to the possible effects. Victor  Frankenstein is the primary cause of his creature's desolation. Indeed, Victor  Frankenstein is at fault for the creature's isolation and malformation, which  causes the creature to feel rejected, lonely, and determined to seek revenge.       Victor Frankenstein's determination to constitute a race causes him to create  a deformed creature, which he immediately rejects. In the first place, Victor,  who is strong willed, spends both night and day working on his creation, his  initial concern is to create a race in which he may be their leader. He also  uses parts that are bigger in size so that he may finish faster. When he  finishes his reaction is completely different from what he had expected. For  instance, when he is done with his creation he becomes so appalled by its  appearance that he "rushed out of the room" (42). When Victor awakens the next  morning he finds the creature at his bedside and at that moment he leaves. When  he returns he finds an empty house with no creature in sight, which brings him a  feeling of relief. Victor describes the creature as a "demonical corpse" (43) to  which he has given life. Furthermore, Victor, sometime later, sees the creature  at a distance and never once decides to approach i   t. Instead Victor always  rushes in the opposing direction. For example, while Victor is on his journey  home he crosses the lake to Plainpalais and sees...              ...s wickedness and its wanting to seek revenge.      Ã       In conclusion, Victor Frankenstein is to blame for the actions of the  creature, which was brought about by its rejection. Victor became obsessive in  his work, but when his creation was complete he fully rejected it causing the  creature to lead a life of solitude. The monster also attempts to seek  acceptance from society and fails. The creature, also aware that it has been  rejected by Victor, pursues a life of revenge killing those dear to him. Hence,  if Victor would have never abandoned his creation the multiple deaths of the  innocent could have been prevented.      Works Consulted     Boyd, Stephen. York Notes on Mary Shelley's Frankenstein. Longman York Press,  1992.     Shelley, Mary. Frankenstein or the Modern Prometheus. Edited with an  Introduction and notes by Maurice Hindle. Penguin books,  1992                        
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