Leave The Creature In Mary Shelley's Frankenstein

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In the novel Frankenstein. Mary Shelley does not leave the Creature unpunished, although it is not a conventional punishment that a person would think of, like being sentenced to jail. At the end of the novel the Creature is telling Walton that he has sacrificed life and happiness in order to destroy Frankenstein’s life “For whilst I destroyed his hopes, I did not satisfy my own desires.” (pg. 177). And by doing so the Creature had created his own personal punishment. The fact that he was aware of his own actions and noticed that he had been experiencing punishment since the moment he was created adds to intensity of his punishment. The Creature had to live with the regret of his sins, the loneliness of his path, the hatred that others had