Do you ever want to get back at someone with revenge? Well, if that's the case, Frankenstein, by Mary Shelley and modernized by Gris Grimly, showcases the theme of revenge. Revenge first starts in Volume 1, Chapter 4 after Victor made the creature and then abandons the creature after jetting off to his room and then to the courtyard. “Unable to endure the aspect of the being I had created, I rushed out of the room, and threw myself on the bed in my clothes, endeavoring to seek a few moments of forgetfulness.” (42). The creature does not want that incident to be forgotten, so he goes for William, the brother of Victor. The creature kills William and puts Victor in a feeling of deep sorrow. A flash of lightning illuminated the object, and discovered …show more content…
Victor then prays on a rainy, gloomy mountain, and the creature appears to scare Victor. The creature soon reaches the summit and disappears from Victor. Justine Moritz was soon convicted of Williams's murder because a picture of her mom was in her pocket and the judges thought it tempted the murderer. “ Justine had been taken ill, and confined to her bed; and, after several days, one of the servants had discovered in her pocket the picture of my mother, which had been judged to be the temptation of her murder.” (62). The murder of William was really the only thing. This is where revenge first started. That was not the creature's last strike, it was just the first. Revenge starts to get more and more exciting in Volume 3, pages 137-138 when Victor starts to create the creature's …show more content…
Victor then left the room and locked the door. Victor made a vow to never continue his creations again. Revenge gets more exciting in Volume 3 of Gris Grimley’s, Frankenstein. Revenge ends in Volume 3, Chapter 7 when Victor finally goes down. Victor was with Walton, returning to England. Victor has been cursed by the devil. “I was cursed by some devil, and carried about with me my eternal hell.” (173) Victor stated that as he knew his life was over in defeat by the creature. Victor has been praying for death and succumbs to pneumonia with Walton. Victor then accepts that the creature is determined to live. Victor then asks Walton to get Victor's vengeance before he dies. “If I do Walton, satisfy my vengeance in his death.” (180) The creature then cries at the end knowing that he didn't mean all his wrongs. Is it true that I am a wretch? I have murdered the lovely and helpless; I have strangled the innocent as they slept and grasped death to his throat who never injured me or any other living thing.” (192) The story ends as the creature wants to die after his