Examples Of Anxiety In Frankenstein

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Anxiety and the Monster
In Mary Shelley’s novel, Frankenstein, Victor Frankenstein (the main character) creates a creature known as, the Monster. As life begins for the Monster, he realizes that he is not normal. Continuously throughout the story, he questions himself by saying, “What did this mean? Who was I? What was I? Whence did I come? What was my destination?” (Shelley 115) Although Victor may think otherwise, the Monster felt isolated, desperate for Victor, and was judged constantly by his appearance. The first exemplification is the Monster’s feelings of isolation. Thinking to himself, the Monster said, “But it was all a dream; no Eve soothed my sorrows nor shared my thoughts; I was alone” (Shelley 117). He almost felt as if he could not tell anyone his thoughts because they could not relate. The only person he thought would understand him was Victor, but the Monster said that even his creator had abandoned
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At first he assumed he was a normal human, until he had a realization that he was not. When he noticed that he looked different he said, “I was, besides, endued with a figure hideously deformed and loathsome; I was not even the same nature as man” (Shelley 107). The monster kept asking why, but little did he know was that Victor had assembled him out of stolen body parts. Just like in real life people are not perfectly proportioned either, but some are less noticeable than others. In conclusion, Mary Shelley’s novel represented many themes. The most prominent examples that represented the Monster was his loneliness, his constant longing for Victor, and his feelings of discrimination. The Monster was saddened to see that his owner abandoned him and that he will never be a normal person. Even with accepting that, the Monster still continued to experience harsh anxiety. In the end he reconnects with Victor to find that he is dead, so the Monster says that he too, shall be