Summary: The Account Of Frankenstein's Monster

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The account of Frankenstein and his monster. Sam Robinson Mr. Bershears English 4 iv-4 4-8-2015 What makes the monster a monster? Well I think what makes him a monster is the fact that he hasn’t know much about the kindness of the world but through his brutish experiences. His experience would be traumatizing to anyone. The fact that he would have been angered by the fact that victor Frankenstein refused to create him a spouse is understandable, but victor had his reasons. Frankenstein had grown up pretty wealthily and as he grew he gained a thirst for science. But with this science came consequences for he was studying a dark twisted subject on how to reanimate dead tissues. He spent years upon years trying to figure it out. He would collect dead body part from corpses and sew them together in his attempt to fulfill this ghastly mission. Then finally one night he finally one night achieved his goal but to his surprise it was not as he intended. Frankenstein’s monster was a science experiment gone right but an ugly one at that. After victor had created this monstrosity he fled because he had realized it was a mistake. Soon he would find out that this mistake would be the end of him. The monster had pale yellow skin with unproportioned limbs he was around eight feet tall. This is why his appearance would have made him a monstrosity. …show more content…

This is an important trait .how can you control the if you don’t know what they are. The fact that he didn’t know how to control his anger led to him killing victors’ family. The fact that he was demented led to the monster leading on a chase that nearly killed him, and then ended in the monster killing victor, then the monster dying because of his love for