Frankenstein Loneliness Essay

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Loneliness is a complex but universal emotion. Someone can be lonely in a room full of people or in a dark cave in the middle of nowhere. There is not one place that can make you feel lonely. Mary Shelly plays with the theme of loneliness and togetherness through Frankenstein in every character. Robert Walton Robert is surrounded by the crew of his boat and a valued member of the expedition struggles with being able to fit in and find someone he can call a friend. Robert writes to his sister often as a way to stave off loneliness but even in his letter he can not deny he is alone, “I have one want which I have never yet been able to satisfy and the absence of the object of which I now feel as a most severe evil. I have no friend” (p. 5). Robert’s …show more content…

Victor stops communicating with those closest to him, his family, despite them reaching out. He devotes himself both in mind and soul to stopping death, he doesn’t even take note that his situation should be lonely. Victor finds comfort in watching corpses rot while ignoring his more than sister reaching out, Victor abandons the living to preserve them as he sees fit. Victor only feels the sting of loneliness while he watches his creation stop breathing. The waves of guilt racked through him, he abandoned his family, his friend, his morals, and even himself to create something he even deemed ugly and undeserving of life. Waking to see the consequences of his actions he quickly runs back to those he’d abandoned and they take him because he is family. Frankenstein is regularly taken in by those who care for him, nursed to health with soup of generosity and …show more content…

The creature finds himself in the village hoping to find something or someone, he himself doesn’t yet know what he truly wants. The creature sees these people living in harmony and reflects on how he has no one to rely on. He was abandoned like an injured hunting dog, lost with no rhyme or reason. The creature is beaten and chased off before he can grasp the reality of why. Just as the hunter did not hesitate to shoot him for merely existing, the villagers decide in that split second that he is unworthy of life. The creature realizes society will not accept him, whether he is good or evil and hides himself and hides. Watching the Delaceys is the closest he had ever been to being part of a group, while his deeds of good go noticed but not reciprocated he feels a bond forming between them while it is truly one