Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein
Frankenstein, set in Europe in the
1790's, begins with the letters of Captain Robert Walton to his sister. These
letters form the framework for the story in which Walton tells his sister the
story of Victor Frankenstein and his monster as Frankenstein told it to him.
Walton set out to explore the North Pole. The ship got trapped in frozen water
and the crew, watching around them, saw a giant man in the distance on a
dogsled. Hours later they found Frankenstein and his dogsled near the ship, so
they brought the sick man aboard. As he recovered, Frankenstein told Walton his
story so that Walton would learn the price of pursuing glory at any cost.
Frankenstein grew up in a perfectly loving and gentle Swiss family with an
especially close tie to his adopted cousin, Elizabeth, and his dear friend
Henry Clerval. As a young boy, Frankenstein became obsessed with studying
outdated theories about what gives humans their life spark. In college at Ingolstadt, he created his own "perfect" human
from scavenged body parts, but once it lived, the creature was hideous.
Frankenstein was disgusted by its ugliness, so he ran away from it. Henry
Clerval came to Ingolstadt to study with Frankenstein, but ended up nursing him after his exhausting and secret efforts to create a
perfect human life. While Frankenstein recovered from his illness over many
months and then studied languages with Clerval at the college, the monster
wandered around looking for friendship. After several harsh
encounters with humans, the monster became afraid of them and spent a long time
living near a cottage and observing the family who lived there. Through these
observations he became educated and realized that he was very different from
the humans he watched. Out of loneliness, the monster sought the friendship of
this family, but they were afraid of him, and this rejection made him seek
vengeance against his creator. He went to Geneva and met a little boy in the
woods. The monster hoped to kidnap him and keep him as a companion, but the boy
was Frankenstein's younger brother, so the monster killed him to get back at
his creator. Then the monster planted the necklace he removed from the child's
body on a beautiful girl who was later executed for the crime. When Frankenstein
learned of his brother's death, he went back to Geneva to be with his family.
In the woods where his young brother was murdered, Frankenstein saw the monster
and knew that he was William's murderer. Frankenstein was ravaged by his grief
and guilt for creating the monster who wreaked so much destruction, and he went
into the mountains alone to find peace. Instead of peace, Frankenstein was
approached by the monster who then demanded that he create a female monster to
be the monster's companion. Frankenstein, fearing for his family, agreed to and
went to England to do his work. Clerval accompanied Frankenstein, but they
separated in Scotland and Frankenstein began his work. When he was almost
finished, he changed his mind because he didn't want to be responsible for the
carnage another monster could create, so he destroyed the project. The monster
vowed revenge on Frankenstein's upcoming wedding night. Before
Frankenstein could return home, the monster murdered
Clerval. Once home, Frankenstein married his cousin Elizabeth right away and
prepared for his death, but the monster killed Elizabeth instead and the grief
of her death killed Frankenstein's father. After that, Frankenstein vowed to
pursue the monster and destroy him. That's how Frankenstein ended up near the
North Pole where Walton's ship was trapped. A few days after Frankenstein
finished his story, Walton and his crew decided to turn back and go home.
Before they left, Frankenstein died and the monster appeared in his room.
Walton heard the monster's explanation for his vengeance as well as his remorse
before he left the ship and traveled toward the Pole to destroy himself so that
none would ever know of his existence.
Major Characters
Robert
Walton: Indirect
narrator of the story, he tells Victor Frankenstein's story through letters to
his sister, Margaret Saville. Walton is a self-educated man who set out to
reach and explore the North Pole and find an Arctic passage to connect the
Atlantic and Pacific Oceans. While his ship is locked in ice, his crew sees
Frankenstein's monster pass by on a dog sled and Frankenstein himself,
exhausted and weakened, not far behind. They take Frankenstein aboard and
Walton nurses him and talks with him because he has been longing for a friend.
In seeing Walton's raw ambition to explore the North Pole at all costs,
Frankenstein is prompted to tell the story of his destruction that a similar
ambition brought upon him. After Frankenstein's death and just before the ship
heads back to England, Walton is also the last to see the monster before he
goes north to kill himself.
Victor
Frankenstein: Frankenstein
is the eldest son of a wealthy, Genevese man, Alphonse, and his young wife,
Caroline. Victor grows up in the perfect family with a happy childhood and a
constant and devoted companion in his adopted cousin, Elizabeth. He is
sensitive, intelligent, and passionate about his interests and becomes absorbed
in the quest to find out what creates life. While away
at college in Ingolstadt, Victor creates a being from scavenged corpse parts
and gives it life, but is repulsed by its hideousness once it lives. The
monster, in retaliation for Victor's negligence, destroys his life by killing
off those Victor loves. Victor chases him to the far reaches of the Arctic
planning to destroy him and then die to escape his misery and remorse at his
creation, but he dies aboard Walton's ship before he can catch the monster.
The
Monster: Created
by Victor Frankenstein in Ingolstadt, the monster is a conglomeration of human
parts with inhuman strength. He is so hideous that Victor, his own creator,
cannot stand to look upon him. He is loving and gentle at the beginning of his
life, childlike in his curiosity and experiences, but after several harsh
encounters with humans, he becomes bitter. He seeks revenge on his creator for
making him so hideous and rendering him permanently lonely because of his
ugliness. He offers Frankenstein peace in exchange for a companion of like
origin, but when Frankenstein does not comply, he vows to destroy him and
begins killing off Frankenstein's friends and family -- those figures he most
envies because he does not have them. After finding Frankenstein dead aboard
Walton's ship, the monster goes further north with plans to destroy himself and
end the suffering that Frankenstein began when he created him.
Elizabeth
Lavenza: Adopted
cousin of Victor Frankenstein. Elizabeth was a beautiful orphan being raised by
an Italian peasant family when Caroline Beaufort Frankenstein adopted her. She
became Victor's constant companion and he watched over her as if she were his
own possession from their meeting when he was 5 years old. Her beauty and
kindness made her adored almost reverently by all who knew her, and it was
taken for granted that she and Victor would marry. She is the gentling
influence and the comforter for the males of the
Frankenstein family when Caroline dies, and her beauty and goodness are
constant throughout her life. She and Victor are married, but on their wedding night, the monster strangles Elizabeth to punish Victor for
not creating for him a companion creature.
Henry
Clerval: Life-long
friend of Victor Frankenstein, Henry was poetic, sensitive and caring, and
their friendship was a strong one. When Victor was in Ingolstadt so long
without sending word to his family, Henry relocated there to study and to look
after Victor. Henry nursed him through a long period of illness before Victor
returned to Geneva. Later they traveled together to England and Scotland, but
while they were there, the monster strangled Henry to punish Victor. Victor was
accused of the murder, but was acquitted.
Justine
Moritz: Servant
in the Frankenstein household, Justine was another beautiful, gentle, and kind
addition to the Frankenstein family whom Caroline took in to care for and
educate. When Caroline got scarlet fever, Justine nursed her, and after
Caroline died, Justine returned to her own mother. Her mother too became ill
and died, so Justine returned to the Frankenstein home to help raise the two
sons Caroline had left when she died. Justine was a grateful and faithful part
of their household, but she was accused of 5-year-old William Frankenstein's
murder when a locket he had been wearing was
found in her dress. Although she had been framed by the monster and was innocent,
she was executed and Victor considered her death his fault because he created
the monster who framed her.
Alphonse
Frankenstein: Victor
Frankenstein's father, Alphonse was a wealthy and benevolent man who loved his
wife and his children very dearly. He rescued Caroline Beaufort, daughter of
his close friend, from poverty after her father's death. He was a doting
husband and father bent by the grief of loss after loss until he dies from
accumulated sorrow and shock.
Caroline
Beaufort Frankenstein: Wife of Alphonse and mother of Victor, Ernest, and William,
Caroline Beaufort Frankenstein was the daughter of a once-wealthy friend of
Alphonse. Planning to aid his friend, Alphonse found his home and went there
only to find Caroline weeping over his coffin. Alphonse took her into his home
and married her two years later. They had a loving relationship and cared for
their children very much. She was a good, beautiful, and gentle woman adored by
all her family until she died from the scarlet fever she contracted nursing Elizabeth back to health.
Mrs.
Margaret Saville: Sister
of Robert Walton, ship captain, Mrs. Saville is significant only because she is
the recipient of the letters describing Frankenstein's story. Walton writes to
her of the progress of his journey and his acquaintance with Frankenstein.
Beaufort:
Friend of
Alphonse Frankenstein and Caroline's father, Beaufort lost his wealth and
relocated to escape the humiliation of his poverty. Caroline nursed him as his
health declined and was weeping over his coffin when Alphonse found her and
took her back to Geneva.
M.
Waldman: Chemistry
professor at Ingolstadt. His lectures revive Victor's interest in discovering
the spark of life and creation.
Ernest
Frankenstein: Victor's
brother. Ernest is 7 years younger than Victor and is only mentioned a few
times, the longest reference in a letter to Victor from Elizabeth. She mentions
that Ernest wants to join the Swiss military.
William
Frankenstein: Victor's
youngest brother, William is sweet, happy, greatly adored by his family.
William is strangled in the woods while the family was out for a walk. His is
the first of the monster's victims, and Justine is framed for the murder.
De
Lacey Family: Felix,
Agatha, and their blind father. This is the family of cottagers near where the
monster lives. They are French exiles living in Germany because Felix helped an
unjustly imprisoned Turk escape. He watches them and over time learns to speak
and read from observing them. The monster becomes attached to them and chops
wood for them as well as other small services without revealing himself to
them. He craves their acceptance and affection and educates himself further to
win them over. When he seeks their affection, however, they are afraid of him
and their scorn sends him away. This rejection sends him on a quest to find
Victor, his creator, and seek vengeance.
Muhammadan:
Turk
Felix aided and for whom the De Lacey family was exiled to Germany. Muhammadan
was unjustly condemned for reasons of religion and wealth, and Felix helped him
escape, falling in love with Muhammadan's daughter, Safie, along the way.
Muhammadan promises to allow them to marry, but plans secretly to take Safie
back to Turkey with him.
Safie:
Daughter
of Muhammadan and Arabian Christian woman. Safie falls in love with
Felix and doesn't want to return to the oppressive country of her birth. When
her father leaves for Turkey with the expectation that she will follow soon
after with all of his possessions, she seeks out Felix and lives with him and
his family in Germany.
M.
Kirwin: Irish magistrate who cares for Victor when he
falls ill after being accused of Henry's murder. Kirwin is sympathetic and
believes Victor is innocent, so he has a doctor care for Victor while he is imprisoned
and also sends for Alphonse.
Objects/Places
Geneva:
Geneva,
Switzerland. Home of the Frankenstein family where Victor
grew up and to which he returned after college and the creation of the
monster. The murders of William and Justine were located in the area around
Geneva.and created the monster in his laboratory there. This was the city of
the monster's awakening.
Miniature:
A locket with a picture of Caroline Frankenstein. William borrowed
this from Elizabeth just before he was murdered and the miniature was missing
when they found his body, so it was assumed that a thief murdered him for the
necklace, but the monster had taken it because the picture of Caroline was
beautiful. He planted the miniature on Justine so that she would be blamed for
the crime. This piece of evidence, which she could not explain, condemned her
to death.
Mont
Blanc: A
mountain near Geneva. This mountain is referred to again and again in
descriptions of scenery throughout the novel. It carries weight as a mark of
Romanticism because it is the subject of a famous poem by William Wordsworth, one of Mary Shelley's contemporaries.
Orkney
Islands: Orkney
Islands, Scotland. Victor stays in a hut on one of the sparsely populated
Orkney Islands to create a second creature to be a companion to the monster.
The
Monster's Companion: The
monster demanded that Victor create a second, female monster to act as a
companion to the first, or he would be destroyed by the monster's vengeance.
Victor agrees reluctantly, but when he is almost finished with the second
creature, he realizes the horrific repercussions of creating another monster
and destroys his work. This sparks the killing spree and ensuing chase that
ends Victor's and the monster's lives.
North
Pole: Destination
of Robert Walton and his ship as well as the monster and Victor. Walton is
bound for the North Pole to explore in the hopes of uncovering secrets of the
earth and gaining glory for his discovery. Victor is following the monster to
the North Pole to destroy him or die trying, and they meet while Walton's ship
is trapped in ice. Walton and Victor never make it to the North Pole because
Walton's men want to turn back for England and Victor dies. The monster,
however, is last seen on his way to the furthest point north to destroy himself
so that none will know of his hideous existence.
Chamounix:
Frankenstein
traveled to Chamounix to escape his guilt and depression, but while he was in
Chamounix, the monster approached him about creating a female monster companion
for him. The monster lived in an ice cave not far from Chamounix.