Many claim that Mary Shelley's "Frankenstein" story's main antagonist is Frankenstein's Monster. In reality, Victor Frankenstein, the monster's creator, is to blame.He demonstrated how his disregard for his creation resulted in countless deaths, including his own. In this tale, the brilliant scientist Victor Frankenstein becomes infatuated with the idea of bringing something back from the dead. He creates a creature and is able to give it life. However, it turns out to be a disgusting creature that both Victor and humanity as a whole reject, rather than the ideal specimen he had anticipated. Victor Frankenstein is malevolent because he created a new life form and abandoned it without knowledge or morals, which are the fundamental requirements of a human being. "Frankenstein made me what I am." Then he ran from me. He gave me a life without love or friends. Is he not a monster for doing that? The life I had to live drove me mad. In my madness, I killed. (Shelley 73) "These are the monster's words; it shows us how cruel Victor was to him." He states he did not experience affection or care; instead, he was regarded as someone to be avoided. Due to all of this, the …show more content…
"When he wakes, the creature is standing above him smiling. Still shocked and disgusted, Victor flees from his apartment, abandoning the creature. (Lall 18) This line portrays Victor's terror of his own creation, which caused him to run, trapped with a paranoid mentality, abandoning his new life creation.This line supports the argument that Victor is the most evil character because he deliberately leaves the monster behind. His own health begins to deteriorate as a result of how much of his guilty conscience was filled as a result of how horrifying he believed his creation was. When they both confronted each other, the monster, who was merely seeking someone, was rejected by his own creator, which set off a chain of negative events that lasted the rest of the