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Frankenstein
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HYPERLINK
"javascript:CharacterWindow( http://www.sparknotes.com/lit/frankenstein/
terms/char_7.html , 30d164167e , 500)" Frankenstein opens with a
preface, signed by Mary Shelley but commonly supposed to have been
written by her husband, Percy Bysshe Shelley. It states that the novel
was begun during a summer vacation in the Swiss Alps, when unseasonably
rainy weather and nights spent reading German ghost stories inspired the
author and her literary companions to engage in a ghost story writing
contest, of which this work is the only completed product.
The novel itself begins with a series of letters from the explorer
HYPERLINK
"javascript:CharacterWindow( http://www.sparknotes.com/lit/frankenstein/
terms/char_3.html , 160fbf0fdd , 500)" Robert Walton to his sister,
Margaret Saville. Walton, a well-to-do Englishman with a passion for
seafaring, is the captain of a ship headed on a dangerous voyage to the
North Pole. In the first letter, he tells his sister of the preparations
leading up to his departure and of the desire burning in him to
accomplish “some great purposeâ€Ââ€â€discovering a northern passage to
the Pacific, revealing the source of the Earth’s magnetism, or simply
setting foot on undiscovered territory.
In the second letter, Walton bemoans his lack of friends. He feels
lonely and isolated, too sophisticated to find comfort in his shipmates
and too uneducated to find a sensitive soul with whom to share his
dreams. He shows himself a Romantic, with his “love for the
marvellous, a belief in the marvellous,†which pushes him along the
perilous, lonely pathway he has chosen. In the brief third letter,
Walton tells his sister that his ship has set sail and that he has full
confidence that he will achieve his aim.
In the fourth letter, the ship stalls between huge sheets of ice, and
Walton and his men spot a sledge guided by a gigantic creature about
half a mile away. The next morning, they encounter another sledge
stranded on an ice floe. All but one of the dogs drawing the sledge is
dead, and the man on the sledgeâ€â€not the man seen the night beforeâ€â€is
emaciated, weak, and starving. Despite his condition, the man refuses to
board the ship until Walton tells him that it is heading north. The
stranger spends two days recovering, nursed by the crew, before he can
speak. The crew is burning with curiosity, but Walton, aware of the
man’s still-fragile state, prevents his men from burdening the
stranger with questions. As time passes, Walton and the stranger become
friends, and the stranger eventually consents to tell Walton his story.
At the end of the fourth letter, Walton states that the visitor will
commence his narrative the next day; Walton’s framing narrative ends
and the stranger’s begins.
The stranger, who the reader soon learns is HYPERLINK
"javascript:CharacterWindow( http://www.sparknotes.com/lit/frankenstein/
terms/char_1.html , 236e45add1 , 500)" Victor Frankenstein , begins his
narration. He starts with his family background, birth, and early
childhood, telling HYPERLINK
"javascript:CharacterWindow( http://www.sparknotes.com/lit/frankenstein/
terms/char_3.html , df2fba1421 , 500)" Walton about his father,
HYPERLINK
"javascript:CharacterWindow( http://www.sparknotes.com/lit/frankenstein/
terms/char_4.html , f73967d2a6 , 500)" Alphonse , and his mother,
HYPERLINK
"javascript:CharacterWindow( http://www.sparknotes.com/lit/frankenstein/
terms/char_9.html , 62cb77391b , 500)" Caroline . Alphonse became
Caroline’s protector when her father, Alphonse’s longtime friend
HYPERLINK
"javascript:CharacterWindow( http://www.sparknotes.com/lit/frankenstein/
terms/char_10.html , 4c4c1be9b9 , 500)" Beaufort , died in poverty.
They married two years later, and Victor was born soon after. HYPERLINK
"javascript:CharacterWindow( http://www.sparknotes.com/lit/frankenstein/
terms/char_7.html , 7732d5d30e , 500)" Frankenstein then describes how
his childhood companion, HYPERLINK
"javascript:CharacterWindow( http://www.sparknotes.com/lit/frankenstein/
terms/char_5.html , af0aa076a3 , 500)" Elizabeth Lavenza , entered his
family. At this point in the narrative, the original (1818) and revised
(1831) versions of Frankenstein diverge. In the original version,
Elizabeth is Victor’s cousin, the daughter of Alphonse’s sister;
when Victor is four years old, Elizabeth’s mother dies and Elizabeth
is adopted into the Frankenstein family. In the revised version,
Elizabeth is discovered by Caroline, on a trip to Italy, when Victor is
about five years old. While visiting a poor Italian family, Caroline
notices a beautiful blonde girl among the dark-haired Italian children;
upon discovering that Elizabeth is the orphaned daughter of a Milanese
nobleman and a German woman and that the Italian family can barely
afford to feed her, Caroline adopts Elizabeth and brings her back to
Geneva. Victor’s mother decides at the moment of the adoption that
Elizabeth and Victor should someday marry.
Elizabeth and Victor grow up together as best friends. Victor’s
friendship with HYPERLINK
"javascript:CharacterWindow( http://www.sparknotes.com/lit/frankenstein/
terms/char_6.html , a30628ab1c , 500)" Henry Clerval , a schoolmate and
only child, flourishes as well, and he spends his childhood happily
surrounded by this close domestic circle. As a teenager, Victor becomes
increasingly fascinated by the mysteries of the natural world. He
chances upon a book by Cornelius Agrippa, a sixteenth-century scholar of
the occult sciences, and becomes interested in natural philosophy. He
studies the outdated findings of the alchemists Agrippa, Paracelsus, and
Albertus Magnus with enthusiasm. He witnesses the destructive power of
nature when, during a raging storm, lightning destroys a tree near his
house. A modern natural philosopher accompanying the Frankenstein family
explains to Victor the workings of electricity, making the ideas of the
alchemists seem outdated and worthless. (In the 1818 version, a
demonstration of electricity by his father convinces Victor of the
alchemists’ mistakenness.)
At the age of seventeen, HYPERLINK
"javascript:CharacterWindow( http://www.sparknotes.com/lit/frankenstein/
terms/char_1.html , baebe23d90 , 500)" Victor leaves his family in
Geneva to attend the university at Ingolstadt. Just before Victor
departs, his mother catches scarlet fever from HYPERLINK
"javascript:CharacterWindow( http://www.sparknotes.com/lit/frankenstein/
terms/char_5.html , 69b62b0608 , 500)" Elizabeth , whom she has been
nursing back to health, and dies. On her deathbed, she begs Elizabeth
and Victor to marry. Several weeks later, still grieving, Victor goes
off to Ingolstadt. Arriving at the university, he finds quarters in the
town and sets up a meeting with a professor of natural philosophy,
HYPERLINK
"javascript:CharacterWindow( http://www.sparknotes.com/lit/frankenstein/
terms/char_13.html , b443a6f9c6 , 500)" M. Krempe . Krempe tells Victor
that all the time that Victor has spent studying the alchemists has been
wasted, further souring Victor on the study of natural philosophy. He
then attends a lecture in chemistry by a professor named HYPERLINK
"javascript:CharacterWindow( http://www.sparknotes.com/lit/frankenstein/
terms/char_12.html , 0f9d298be5 , 500)" Waldman . This lecture, along
with a subsequent meeting with the professor, convinces Victor to pursue
his studies in the sciences.
Victor attacks his studies with enthusiasm and, ignoring his social life
and his family far away in Geneva, makes rapid progress. Fascinated by
the mystery of the creation of life, he begins to study how the human
body is built (anatomy) and how it falls apart (death and decay). After
several years of tireless work, he masters all that his professors have
to teach him, and he goes one step further: discovering the secret of
life.
Privately, hidden away in his apartment where no one can see him work,
he decides to begin the construction of an animate creature, envisioning
the creation of a new race of wonderful beings. Zealously devoting
himself to this labor, he neglects everything elseâ€â€family, friends,
studies, and social lifeâ€â€and grows increasingly pale, lonely, and
obsessed.
One stormy night, after months of labor, Victor completes his creation.
But when he brings it to life, its awful appearance horrifies him. He
rushes to the next room and tries to sleep, but he is troubled by
nightmares about Elizabeth and his mother’s corpse. He wakes to
discover the monster looming over his bed with a grotesque smile and
rushes out of the house. He spends the night pacing in his courtyard.
The next morning, he goes walking in the town of Ingolstadt, frantically
avoiding a return to his now-haunted apartment.
As he walks by the town inn, Victor comes across his friend HYPERLINK
"javascript:CharacterWindow( http://www.sparknotes.com/lit/frankenstein/
terms/char_6.html , 9d2944c480 , 500)" Henry Clerval, who has just
arrived to begin studying at the university. Delighted to see Henryâ€â€a
breath of fresh air and a reminder of his family after so many months of
isolation and ill healthâ€â€he brings him back to his apartment. Victor
enters first and is relieved to find no sign of the monster. But,
weakened by months of work and shock at the horrific being he has
created, he immediately falls ill with a nervous fever that lasts
several months. Henry nurses him back to health and, when Victor has
recovered, gives him a letter from Elizabeth that had arrived during his
illness.
HYPERLINK
"javascript:CharacterWindow( http://www.sparknotes.com/lit/frankenstein/
terms/char_5.html , 914b74889f , 500)" Elizabeth ’s letter expresses
her concern about HYPERLINK
"javascript:CharacterWindow( http://www.sparknotes.com/lit/frankenstein/
terms/char_1.html , d517c871a4 , 500)" Victor ’s illness and entreats
him to write to his family in Geneva as soon as he can. She also tells
him that HYPERLINK
"javascript:CharacterWindow( http://www.sparknotes.com/lit/frankenstein/
terms/char_8.html , 2aa51d952c , 500)" Justine Moritz , a girl who used
to live with the HYPERLINK
"javascript:CharacterWindow( http://www.sparknotes.com/lit/frankenstein/
terms/char_7.html , 128a329f4c , 500)" Frankenstein family, has
returned to their house following her mother’s death. After Victor has
recovered, he introduces HYPERLINK
"javascript:CharacterWindow( http://www.sparknotes.com/lit/frankenstein/
terms/char_6.html , b47f2deaf9 , 500)" Henry , who is studying Oriental
languages, to the professors at the university. The task is painful,
however, since the sight of any chemical instrument worsens Victor’s
symptoms; even speaking to his professors torments him. He decides to
return to Geneva and awaits a letter from his father specifying the date
of his departure. Meanwhile, he and Henry take a walking tour through
the country, uplifting their spirits with the beauties of nature.
On their return to the university, Victor finds a letter from his father
telling him that Victor’s youngest brother, William, has been
murdered. Saddened, shocked, and apprehensive, Victor departs
immediately for Geneva. By the time he arrives, night has fallen and the
gates of Geneva have been shut, so he spends the evening walking in the
woods around the outskirts of the town. As he walks near the spot where
his brother’s body was found, he spies the monster lurking and becomes
convinced that his creation is responsible for killing William. The next
day, however, when he returns home, Victor learns that Justine has been
accused of the murder. After the discovery of the body, a servant had
found in Justine’s pocket a picture of HYPERLINK
"javascript:CharacterWindow( http://www.sparknotes.com/lit/frankenstein/
terms/char_9.html , 03a907654f , 500)" Caroline HYPERLINK
"javascript:CharacterWindow( http://www.sparknotes.com/lit/frankenstein/
terms/char_4.html , 0b4622a1c9 , 500)" Frankenstein last seen in
William’s possession. Victor proclaims Justine’s innocence, but the
evidence against her seems irrefutable, and Victor refuses to explain
himself for fear that he will be labeled insane.
Justine confesses to the crime, believing that she will thereby gain
salvation, but tells Elizabeth and Victor that she is innocentâ€â€and
miserable. They remain convinced of her innocence, but Justine is soon
executed. Victor becomes consumed with guilt, knowing that the monster
he created and the cloak of secrecy within which the creation took place
have now caused the deaths of two members of his family.
After HYPERLINK
"javascript:CharacterWindow( http://www.sparknotes.com/lit/frankenstein/
terms/char_8.html , f8599806a2 , 500)" Justine ’s execution,
HYPERLINK
"javascript:CharacterWindow( http://www.sparknotes.com/lit/frankenstein/
terms/char_1.html , f0b965a7ba , 500)" Victor becomes increasingly
melancholy. He considers suicide but restrains himself by thinking of
HYPERLINK
"javascript:CharacterWindow( http://www.sparknotes.com/lit/frankenstein/
terms/char_5.html , 834e8113c4 , 500)" Elizabeth and his father.
HYPERLINK
"javascript:CharacterWindow( http://www.sparknotes.com/lit/frankenstein/
terms/char_4.html , a8a2816c66 , 500)" Alphonse , hoping to cheer up
his son, takes his children on an excursion to the family home at
Belrive. From there, Victor wanders alone toward the valley of
Chamounix. The beautiful scenery cheers him somewhat, but his respite
from grief is short-lived.
One rainy day, Victor wakes to find his old feelings of despair
resurfacing. He decides to travel to the summit of Montanvert, hoping
that the view of a pure, eternal, beautiful natural scene will revive
his spirits.
When he reaches the glacier at the top, he is momentarily consoled by
the sublime spectacle. As he crosses to the opposite side of the
glacier, however, he spots a creature loping toward him at incredible
speed. At closer range, he recognizes clearly the grotesque shape of the
monster. He issues futile threats of attack to the monster, whose
enormous strength and speed allow him to elude Victor easily. Victor
curses him and tells him to go away, but the monster, speaking
eloquently, persuades him to accompany him to a fire in a cave of ice.
Inside the cave, the monster begins to narrate the events of his life.
Sitting by the fire in his hut, the monster tells HYPERLINK
"javascript:CharacterWindow( http://www.sparknotes.com/lit/frankenstein/
terms/char_1.html , c39de19331 , 500)" Victor of the confusion that he
experienced upon being created. He describes his flight from Victor’s
apartment into the wilderness and his gradual acclimation to the world
through his discovery of the sensations of light, dark, hunger, thirst,
and cold. According to his story, one day he finds a fire and is pleased
at the warmth it creates, but he becomes dismayed when he burns himself
on the hot embers. He realizes that he can keep the fire alive by adding
wood, and that the fire is good not only for heat and warmth but also
for making food more palatable. In search of food, the monster finds a
hut and enters it. His presence causes an old man inside to shriek and
run away in fear. HYPERLINK
"javascript:CharacterWindow( http://www.sparknotes.com/lit/frankenstein/
terms/char_2.html , d8cac55a7a , 500)" The monster proceeds to a
village, where more people flee at the sight of him. As a result of
these incidents, he resolves to stay away from humans. One night he
takes refuge in a small hovel adjacent to a cottage. In the morning, he
discovers that he can see into the cottage through a crack in the wall
and observes that the occupants are a young man, a young woman, and an
old man.
Observing his neighbors for an extended period of time, the monster
notices that they often seem unhappy, though he is unsure why. He
eventually realizes, however, that their despair results from their
poverty, to which he has been contributing by surreptitiously stealing
their food. Torn by his guilty conscience, he stops stealing their food
and does what he can to reduce their hardship, gathering wood at night
to leave at the door for their use.
The monster becomes aware that his neighbors are able to communicate
with each other using strange sounds. Vowing to learn their language, he
tries to match the sounds they make with the actions they perform. He
acquires a basic knowledge of the language, including the names of the
young man and woman, Felix and Agatha. He admires their graceful forms
and is shocked by his ugliness when he catches sight of his reflection
in a pool of water. He spends the whole winter in the hovel, unobserved
and well protected from the elements, and grows increasingly
affectionate toward his unwitting hosts.
As winter thaws into spring, the monster notices that the cottagers,
particularly Felix, seem unhappy. A beautiful woman in a dark dress and
veil arrives at the cottage on horseback and asks to see Felix. Felix
becomes ecstatic the moment he sees her. The woman, who does not speak
the language of the cottagers, is named Safie. She moves into the
cottage, and the mood of the household immediately brightens. As Safie
learns the language of the cottagers, so does the monster. He also
learns to read, and, since Felix uses Constantin-François de Volney’s
Ruins of Empires to instruct Safie, he learns a bit of world history in
the process. Now able to speak and understand the language perfectly,
the monster learns about human society by listening to the cottagers’
conversations. Reflecting on his own situation, he realizes that he is
deformed and alone. “Was I then then a monster,†he asks, “a blot
upon the earth, from which all men fled, and whom all men disowned?â€Â
He also learns about the pleasures and obligations of the family and of
human relations in general, which deepens the agony of his own
isolation.
After some time, the monster’s constant eavesdropping allows him to
reconstruct the history of the cottagers. The old man, De Lacey, was
once an affluent and successful citizen in Paris; his children, Agatha
and Felix, were well-respected members of the community. Safie’s
father, a Turk, was falsely accused of a crime and sentenced to death.
Felix visited the Turk in prison and met his daughter, with whom he
immediately fell in love. Safie sent Felix letters thanking him for his
intention to help her father and recounting the circumstances of her
plight (the monster tells HYPERLINK
"javascript:CharacterWindow( http://www.sparknotes.com/lit/frankenstein/
terms/char_1.html , 9369148de6 , 500)" Victor that he copied some of
these letters and offers them as proof that his tale is true). The
letters relate that Safie’s mother was a Christian Arab who had been
enslaved by the Turks before marrying her father. She inculcated in
Safie an independence and intelligence that Islam prevented Turkish
women from cultivating. Safie was eager to marry a European man and
thereby escape the near-slavery that awaited her in Turkey. Felix
successfully coordinated her father’s escape from prison, but when the
plot was discovered, Felix, Agatha, and De Lacey were exiled from France
and stripped of their wealth. They then moved into the cottage in
Germany upon which the monster has stumbled. Meanwhile, the Turk tried
to force Safie to return to Constantinople with him, but she managed to
escape with some money and the knowledge of Felix’s whereabouts.
While foraging for food in the woods around the cottage one night, the
monster finds an abandoned leather satchel containing some clothes and
books. Eager to learn more about the world than he can discover through
the chink in the cottage wall, he brings the books back to his hovel and
begins to read. The books include Johann Wolfgang von Goethe’s Sorrows
of Werter, a volume of Plutarch’s Lives, and John Milton’s Paradise
Lost, the last of which has the most profound effect on the monster.
Unaware that Paradise Lost is a work of imagination, he reads it as a
factual history and finds much similarity between the story and his own
situation. Rifling through the pockets of his own clothes, stolen long
ago from HYPERLINK
"javascript:CharacterWindow( http://www.sparknotes.com/lit/frankenstein/
terms/char_1.html , 33e5d47c53 , 500)" Victor ’s apartment, he finds
some papers from Victor’s journal. With his newfound ability to read,
he soon understands the horrific manner of his own creation and the
disgust with which his creator regarded him. Dismayed by these
discoveries, the monster wishes to reveal himself to the cottagers in
the hope that they will see past his hideous exterior and befriend him.
He decides to approach the blind De Lacey first, hoping to win him over
while Felix, Agatha, and Safie are away. He believes that De Lacey,
unprejudiced against his hideous exterior, may be able to convince the
others of his gentle nature.
The perfect opportunity soon presents itself, as Felix, Agatha, and
Safie depart one day for a long walk. HYPERLINK
"javascript:CharacterWindow( http://www.sparknotes.com/lit/frankenstein/
terms/char_2.html , 686a7e89c5 , 500)" The monster nervously enters
the cottage and begins to speak to the old man. Just as he begins to
explain his situation, however, the other three return unexpectedly.
Felix drives the monster away, horrified by his appearance.
In the wake of this rejection, the monster swears to revenge himself
against all human beings, his creator in particular. Journeying for
months out of sight of others, he makes his way toward Geneva. On the
way, he spots a young girl, seemingly alone; the girl slips into a
stream and appears to be on the verge of drowning. When the monster
rescues the girl from the water, the man accompanying her, suspecting
him of having attacked her, shoots him. As he nears Geneva, the monster
runs across Victor’s younger brother, HYPERLINK
"javascript:CharacterWindow( http://www.sparknotes.com/lit/frankenstein/
terms/char_7.html , 59b6648d85 , 500)" William , in the woods. When
William mentions that his father is HYPERLINK
"javascript:CharacterWindow( http://www.sparknotes.com/lit/frankenstein/
terms/char_4.html , 5b9c98a3b0 , 500)" Alphonse Frankenstein , the
monster erupts in a rage of vengeance and strangles the boy to death
with his bare hands. He takes a picture of HYPERLINK
"javascript:CharacterWindow( http://www.sparknotes.com/lit/frankenstein/
terms/char_9.html , 187323c093 , 500)" Caroline Frankenstein that the
boy has been holding and places it in the folds of the dress of a girl
sleeping in a barn HYPERLINK
"javascript:CharacterWindow( http://www.sparknotes.com/lit/frankenstein/
terms/char_8.html , 788f4f2521 , 500)" Justine Moritz, who is later
executed for William’s murder.
Having explained to Victor the circumstances behind William’s murder
and Justine’s conviction, the monster implores Victor to create
another monster to accompany him and be his mate.
The monster tells Victor that it is his right to have a female monster
companion. Victor refuses at first, but the monster appeals to his sense
of responsibility as his creator. He tells Victor that all of his evil
actions have been the result of a desperate loneliness. He promises to
take his new mate to South America to hide in the jungle far from human
contact. With the sympathy of a fellow monster, he argues, he will no
longer be compelled to kill. Convinced by these arguments, Victor
finally agrees to create a female monster. Overjoyed but still
skeptical, the monster tells Victor that he will monitor Victor’s
progress and that Victor need not worry about contacting him when his
work is done.
After his fateful meeting with the monster on the glacier, HYPERLINK
"javascript:CharacterWindow( http://www.sparknotes.com/lit/frankenstein/
terms/char_1.html , de08882841 , 500)" Victor puts off the creation of
a new, female creature. He begins to have doubts about the wisdom of
agreeing to the monster’s request. He realizes that the project will
require him to travel to England to gather information. His father
notices that his spirits are troubled much of the timeâ€â€Victor, still
racked by guilt over the deaths of HYPERLINK
"javascript:CharacterWindow( http://www.sparknotes.com/lit/frankenstein/
terms/char_7.html , 219650f43f , 500)" William and HYPERLINK
"javascript:CharacterWindow( http://www.sparknotes.com/lit/frankenstein/
terms/char_8.html , 3541f8ae73 , 500)" Justine , is now newly horrified
by the task in which he is about to engageâ€â€and asks him if his
impending marriage to HYPERLINK
"javascript:CharacterWindow( http://www.sparknotes.com/lit/frankenstein/
terms/char_5.html , 07dcd07860 , 500)" Elizabeth is the source of his
melancholy. Victor assures him that the prospect of marriage to
Elizabeth is the only happiness in his life. Eager to raise Victor’s
spirits, HYPERLINK
"javascript:CharacterWindow( http://www.sparknotes.com/lit/frankenstein/
terms/char_4.html , d6d95c472e , 500)" Alphonse suggests that they
celebrate the marriage immediately. Victor refuses, unwilling to marry
Elizabeth until he has completed his obligation to the monster. He asks
Alphonse if he can first travel to England, and Alphonse consents.
Victor and Alphonse arrange a two-year tour, on which HYPERLINK
"javascript:CharacterWindow( http://www.sparknotes.com/lit/frankenstein/
terms/char_6.html , 39c6a7eee1 , 500)" Henry Clerval , eager to begin
his studies after several years of unpleasant work for his father in
Geneva, will accompany Victor. After traveling for a while, they reach
London.
Victor and Henry journey through England and Scotland, but Victor grows
impatient to begin his work and free himself of his bond to the monster.
Victor has an acquaintance in a Scottish town, with whom he urges Henry
to stay while he goes alone on a tour of Scotland. Henry consents
reluctantly, and Victor departs for a remote, desolate island in the
Orkneys to complete his project.
Quickly setting up a laboratory in a small shack, Victor devotes many
hours to working on his new creature. He often has trouble continuing
his work, however, knowing how unsatisfying, even grotesque, the product
of his labor will be.
While working one night, Victor begins to think about what might happen
after he finishes his creation. He imagines that his new creature might
not want to seclude herself, as the monster had promised, or that the
two creatures might have children, creating “a race of devils . . . on
the earth.†In the midst of these reflections and growing concern,
Victor looks up to see the monster grinning at him through the window.
Overcome by the monster’s hideousness and the possibility of a second
creature like him, he destroys his work in progress. HYPERLINK
"javascript:CharacterWindow( http://www.sparknotes.com/lit/frankenstein/
terms/char_2.html , 08c5d8fbfb , 500)" The monster becomes enraged at
Victor for breaking his promise, and at the prospect of his own
continued solitude. He curses and vows revenge, then departs, swearing
that he will be with Victor on his wedding night.
The following night, Victor receives a letter from Henry, who, tired of
Scotland, suggests that they continue their travels. Before he leaves
his shack, Victor cleans and packs his chemical instruments and collects
the remains of his second creature. Late that evening, he rows out onto
the ocean and throws the remains into the water, allowing himself to
rest in the boat for a while. When he wakes, he finds that the winds
will not permit him to return to shore. Panicking, in fear for his life,
he contemplates the possibility of dying at sea, blown far out into the
Atlantic. Soon the winds change, however, and he reaches shore near a
town. When he lands, a group of townspeople greet him rudely, telling
him that he is under suspicion for a murder discovered the previous
night.
After confronting HYPERLINK
"javascript:CharacterWindow( http://www.sparknotes.com/lit/frankenstein/
terms/char_1.html , 570f0442b1 , 500)" Victor , the townspeople take
him to HYPERLINK
"javascript:CharacterWindow( http://www.sparknotes.com/lit/frankenstein/
terms/char_14.html , 3644d116a8 , 500)" Mr. Kirwin , the town
magistrate. Victor hears witnesses testify against him, claiming that
they found the body of a man along the beach the previous night and
that, just before finding the body, they saw a boat in the water that
resembled Victor’s. Mr. Kirwin decides to bring Victor to look at the
body to see what effect it has on him: if Victor is the murderer,
perhaps he will react with visible emotion. When Victor sees the body,
he does indeed react with horror, for the victim is HYPERLINK
"javascript:CharacterWindow( http://www.sparknotes.com/lit/frankenstein/
terms/char_6.html , 9fcccbecfc , 500)" Henry Clerval , with the black
marks of the monster’s hands around his neck. In shock, Victor falls
into convulsions and suffers a long illness. Victor remains ill for two
months. Upon his recovery, he finds himself still in prison. Mr. Kirwin,
now compassionate and much more sympathetic than before Victor’s
illness, visits him in his cell. He tells him that he has a visitor, and
for a moment Victor fears that the monster has come to cause him even
more misery. The visitor turns out to be his father, who, upon hearing
of his son’s illness and the death of his friend, rushed from Geneva
to see him. Victor is overjoyed to see his father, who stays with him
until the court, having nothing but circumstantial evidence, finds him
innocent of Henry’s murder. After his release, Victor departs with his
father for Geneva.
On their way home, father and son stop in Paris, where Victor rests to
recover his strength. Just before leaving again for Geneva, Victor
receives a letter from HYPERLINK
"javascript:CharacterWindow( http://www.sparknotes.com/lit/frankenstein/
terms/char_5.html , 3fa24aec94 , 500)" Elizabeth . Worried by
Victor’s recurrent illnesses, she asks him if he is in love with
another, to which Victor replies that she is the source of his joy. The
letter reminds him of the monster’s threat that he will be with Victor
on his wedding night. He believes that the monster intends to attack him
and resolves that he will fight back. Whichever one of them is
destroyed, his misery will at last come to an end.
Eventually, Victor and his father arrive home and begin planning the
wedding. Elizabeth is still worried about Victor, but he assures her
that all will be well after the wedding. He has a terrible secret, he
tells her, that he can only reveal to her after they are married. As the
wedding day approaches, Victor grows more and more nervous about his
impending confrontation with the monster. Finally, the wedding takes
place, and Victor and Elizabeth depart for a family cottage to spend the
night.
In the evening, Victor and Elizabeth walk around the grounds, but Victor
can think of nothing but the monster’s imminent arrival. Inside,
Victor worries that Elizabeth might be upset by the monster’s
appearance and the battle between them. He tells her to retire for the
night. He begins to search for the monster in the house, when suddenly
he hears Elizabeth scream and realizes that it was never his death that
the monster had been intending this night. Consumed with grief over
Elizabeth’s death, Victor returns home and tells his father the
gruesome news. Shocked by the tragic end of what should have been a
joyous day, his father dies a few days later. Victor finally breaks his
secrecy and tries to convince a magistrate in Geneva that an unnatural
monster is responsible for the death of Elizabeth, but the magistrate
does not believe him. Victor resolves to devote the rest of his life to
finding and destroying the monster.
His whole family destroyed, HYPERLINK
"javascript:CharacterWindow( http://www.sparknotes.com/lit/frankenstein/
terms/char_1.html , 3bd0104b85 , 500)" Victor decides to leave Geneva
and the painful memories it holds behind him forever. He tracks the
monster for months, guided by slight clues, messages, and hints that the
monster leaves for him. Angered by these taunts, Victor continues his
pursuit into the ice and snow of the North. There he meets HYPERLINK
"javascript:CharacterWindow( http://www.sparknotes.com/lit/frankenstein/
terms/char_3.html , 0acbb77cb4 , 500)" Walton and tells his story. He
entreats Walton to continue his search for vengeance after he is dead.
Walton then regains control of the narrative, continuing the story in
the form of further letters to his sister. He tells her that he believes
in the truth of Victor’s story. He laments that he did not know
Victor, who remains on the brink of death, in better days. One morning,
Walton’s crewmen enter his cabin and beg him to promise that they will
return to England if they break out of the ice in which they have been
trapped ever since the night they first saw the monster’s sledge.
Victor speaks up, however, and convinces the men that the glory and
honor of their quest should be enough motivation for them to continue
toward their goal. They are momentarily moved, but two days later they
again entreat Walton, who consents to the plan of return.
Just before the ship is set to head back to England, Victor dies.
Several days later, Walton hears a strange sound coming from the room in
which Victor’s body lies. Investigating the noise, Walton is startled
to find the monster, as hideous as Victor had described, weeping over
his dead creator’s body. HYPERLINK
"javascript:CharacterWindow( http://www.sparknotes.com/lit/frankenstein/
terms/char_2.html , caf00ce740 , 500)" The monster begins to tell him
of all his sufferings. He says that he deeply regrets having become an
instrument of evil and that, with his creator dead, he is ready to die.
He leaves the ship and departs into the darkness.
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