Creating The Monster In Mary Shelley's Frankenstein '

Words: 690
Pages: 3

There is a price to pay for our wrong doings, you can not expect to take place in a terrible action and think you are gonna come out of it unharmed. Being harmed by these actions does not necessarily mean physically, it can be mentally as well. Throughout the book Victor realizes that his action of creating the monster was a terrible mistake, he was to obsessed and to crazy to stop and think how this could backfire on him and hurt him as well as his loved ones. I side with the creation because of the sorrow, abandonment, and vengeance he feels. When Victor decides to create the monster his heart is filled with too much pride for him to realize what he is doing is wrong. You often hear that the creation of life should be left to one person, God, depending on what you believe in. Victor filled his heart with his pride and his greed and decided to do something no one had done before him. He should have in my opinion tried to put himself in his creations shoes. It would have given him an understanding of what coming into a new world could be like. As well as the fear it could create. Later in the book the creation talks about how scared and confused he was, not …show more content…
He continues to be a victim when he is not accepted by mankind because of his appearance. He finally becomes vengeful when the Delacey family finds him in their home talking to their father and decide to move. The Monster had been watching the family for some time now and gained a liking for the family. What really flips the monsters switch is an event that takes place while he is walking in the woods. He sees a little girl fall into the river and chooses to save her, not but a few seconds after he saves the girl, the girl's father comes. Not putting into consideration that the monster saved his daughter's life, the man shot the creation. He manages to escape, but this event made him declare vengeance on all