Victor And Frankenstein Similarities

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In Mary Shelley's book, Frankenstein, the monster and his creator are at odds with another, one craves friendship, and one craves knowledge. Despite this, both are creatures of loneliness and are blinded by their need to understand life. As they have different motives, they are both one, and the same. Frankenstein and his monster share many similarities, due to their lonely nature, and many differences due to the stark variances in their upbringing.
Their similarities are very striking, as they are both lonely, and have similar motives at different points in the book. The similarities are largely seen with their large connections with nature, and their eventual thirst for revenge. In many scenes in the book, nature is used to pacify Victor, …show more content…

The differences are just as stark as the similarities, majorly with their opposing upbringings, and thus with their motives throughout the book. Victor’s early life was very easy and pleasant, and he remarks this throughout the book. The most obvious of these remarks is when he tells Walton about his childhood: “No human being could have passed a happier childhood than myself.” Victor’s childhood was easy- simple as that. On the other hand, the creatures upbringing wasn’t so good. From his creation to a bright world with nobody to care for him. He says: “It was dark when I awoke; I felt cold also, and half frightened, as it were instinctively, finding myself so desolate. I was a poor, helpless, miserable wretch; I knew, and could distinguish, nothing; but feeling pain invade me on all sides, I sat down and wept.” (84) THe creature had nowhere to go, and was lost for the first years of it’s life, banished to loneliness. In turn, this difference in upbringings causes a difference in their motives. First, Victor thirsts for knowledge and the secret to life. This causes the creation of the creature; his interest in natural philosophy, influence from the world, and the death of his mother. The monster, however, is fueled by his rage and loneliness. This is the most major of similarities between the

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