Victor's Use Of Irony In Frankenstein

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The Irony of The Creature and Victor’s Suffering

One of the things found most intriguing in Shelley’s Frankenstein is that she can flip your opinion of character in one chapter flat. In the plot exposition the reader especially feels for Victor. William died because of the monster he created. He always has a lot of guilt sitting atop his shoulders. We feel in this beginning that this monster is dumb and worthlessly ugly without a father. However, the creature makes the journey of emotions all on his own. “I am chained to eternal hell… I trod heaven in my thoughts, now exulting my powers now burning with the idea of their effects.” Victor Frankenstein has everyone he could ever love at this point, yet he pushes their love away. He believes
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The creature’s looks decided his destiny. We say it isn’t right. The world claims we can’t judge others, it’s wrong. Even so, we do it all the time. Victor’s love and praise from

family is all the creature wanted ever. All he needed was someone to understand and adore him so he could do it in return. “I cannot believe I am the same creature whose thoughts were once filled with a subline and transcendent visions of beauty and the majesty of goodness.” Without Victor the creature finds someone to attach himself to. Once upon a time… the creature found love and emotion through his extraordinary family who cannot see or hear him. He wants to communicate with them, but as he does the creature’s whole world crashes in front of him. Right at this moment is where his heart blackens. Not entirely of course, but Victor pushes this rejected anger in his creature over its limits. Naïve Victor had it coming. If you think about it, Victor could have stopped everything if he would have stayed with his creature in its birth. Or even created a mate. Or even not created him in the first