Frankenstein by Mary Shelley
By: Kevin • Essay • 600 Words • May 4, 2010 • 1,047 Views
Frankenstein by Mary Shelley
Frankenstein
In the book Frankenstein, by Mary Shelley, the two main characters, Victor and the monster have completely different personalities and the expectation of their actions are very different from what one would imagine. When Victor's project of the monster finally comes to life, Victor gets scared and runs away from it, showing the readers how he is a very selfish man. The monster and Victor spend two years away from each other until the monster finds Victor and for the first time they converse. During the conversation each men are clearly seen as being totally different.
After Victor and his monster have talked to each other, Victor and the monster are two completely different men, in fact the monster is more of a man than Victor has shown to be. When Victor first sees the monster he begins by yelling at him and telling him to get away and how ugly he is, yet the monster seems to act more like a human adult and ask Victor to listen and calm down before he goes further on his tyrant. Victor refuses and by this act, Victor's selfishness is seen. Victor did not go into enough thought before he decided to create a monster, because he forgot the most important responsibility. This responsibility is having a family, or at least having someone to be there for you. Victor creates a wretched monster and then expects him to live and be happy on his own, in a world with such wonderful and beautiful things. Victor has only created this monster for his own pleasure in science for creating new life, but once that life is created he does not care anymore. Victor is a selfish and guilt-ridden man, who can not and never will understand that he is in fault for all the deaths in his family.
On the other hand, despite the monsters appearance he is a very sophisticated and a calm monster. When Victor and he first meet, the monster