Solitude In Frankenstein

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Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein provides us a myriad of interesting ideas that characters throughout the story suffer and embraced together. And among those, the story introduces us to the horrors of solitude. The interpretation of just how far solitude can manifest itself and what the characters suffer through, is of course based differently from person to person. And so to fully understand just how horrific solitude is, a new perspective should be shed upon; especially to the ones who revolved upon this despair the most. Hence, throughout the novel Frankenstein, solitude was highly emphasized as the upbringing of a dangerous emotional spike that brings nothing but calamity.
The desolated mentality and hopelessness of being alone, manifests …show more content…

This was especially prevalent with Victor, as the monster of which he created and bestowed life upon, was the one responsible for the deaths of William, Justine, and Henry. So in a sense, “they all died by [Victor’s] hands” (136). The monster not only strangled his little brother, William, and his only friend Henry to death without clemency, but also tampered with the crime scene to frame innocent Justine to death. Hence, the guilt is building upon him, as he is technically the cause for their deaths; he made and unleashed this monster upon himself. And since he dares not to voice this guilt to anyone but himself, (due to the fact that most would not be able to provide consolation and would view him mentally ill), the burden from within slowly eats his sanity piece by piece. Therefore, he can no longer have any sense of peace with the constant fear of the monster lashing upon another person who is dear to him. This plague of insecurity was also exhibited during his wedding night, as he repeatedly exclaimed “...peace,peace, my love...this night is dreadful” (144). Before his wedding night, the monster threatened Victor that he will strike and take his vengeance during his wedding night. However Victor does not know when or where he will attack, driving him to his misery and mental distress. The urge and need to protect Elizabeth and as well as himself also takes its toll. His mind is constantly thinking about the monster, even more than about his newly wed wife. This is significant because like the murders of his loved ones, the myriad of openings that they have for the monster to strike, turns him mad. So ultimately, the unsettling events with the monster’s motive and his guilt, contribute to a disruption to his mental

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