The Role Of The Monster In Mary Shelley's Frankenstein

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Frankenstein by Mary Shelley is a book that is about the scientist Victor Frankenstein and his creation. The creature is a very tall and large monster. The monster goes through a journey trying to be good and learn how to fit in society. The creature’s goal is to be like other humans. Frankenstein's creature is inherently good because he tries his hardest to fit in and be like other humans. First of all when the monster sees a house full of humans, he wants to be like them and make them his friends. “The gentle manners and beauty of the cottagers greatly endeared to me; when they were unhappy, i felt depressed; when they rejoiced, i sympathized in their joys” (Shelley 162). The creature cared for humans and their emotions. The creature also learns his behaviour from the people that he observes in the cottage. The creature does not believe how humans could be evil by seeing the people he is observing and how they act with each other. “For a long time i could not conceive the idea how one man could murder his fellow, or even why there were laws and government, but when i heard the details of vice and bloodshed, my wonder ceased and i turned away with disgust and …show more content…
The monster murdered many people. “Yet when she died! Then i was not miserable. I had cast off all feeling, subdued all anguish, to riot in the excess of my despair”(Shelley 340). The monster gets more and more murderous as the book goes on killing three people and trying to kill others. Most of the violence he learned about is from reading books on human history and how violent we could really be. The creature learns about leaders like Alexander the Great and other leaders in the Ruins of Empires by C.F Volney. The reason that the monster is so evil is because humans and Victor Frankenstein drove him to be a violent, murdering creature who is filled with anger and despair. Humans let him down which did not accept him as a member of