obert Walton, an English adventurer,
undertakes an expedition to the North
Pole. While on this expedition (which
has been a lifelong dream of his),
Walton corresponds with his sister
by letter. Amid the ice floes, Walton
and his crew find an extremely weary
man traveling by dogsled. The man
is near death, and they determine
to take him aboard. Once the mysterious
traveler has somewhat recovered from
his weakness, Robert Walton begins
to talk to him. They two strike up
a friendshipÐWalton is very lonely
and has long desired a close companion).
The man is desolate, and for a long
while will not talk about why he is
traversing the Arctic alone. After
becoming more comfortable with Walton,
he decides to tell him his long-concealed
story.
he speaker is Victor Frankenstein,
for whom the book is named. He will
be the narrator for the bulk of the
novel. Born into a wealthy Swiss family,
Victor enjoyed an idyllic, peaceful
childhood. His parents were kind,
marvelous people; they are presented
as ideals as shining examples of the
goodness of the human spirit. His
father, Alphonse, fell in love with
his wife, Caroline, when her father,
a dear friend of his, passed away.
Alphonse took the young orphan under
his care, and as time passed they
fell in love. He provides for his
wife in grand style. Out of gratitude
for her own good fortune, Caroline
is extremely altruistic. She frequently
visits the poor who live in her part
of the Italian countryside. One day
she chances upon the home of a family
who has a beautiful foster daughter.
Her name is Elizabeth Lavenza. Though
they are kind, the poverty of Elizabeth's
foster parents makes caring for her
a financial burden. Caroline falls
in love with the lovely girl on sight,
and adopts her into the Frankenstein
family. She is close in age to Victor,
and becomes the central, most beloved
part of his childhood. Elizabeth is
Victor's most cherished companion.
Their parents encourage the children
to be close in every imaginable way
as cousins, as brother and sister,
and, in the future, as husband and
wife.
ictor's childhood years pass with
astonishing speed. Two more sons,
William and Ernest, are born into
the family. At this time, the elder
Frankensteins decide to stop their
constant traveling: the family finally
settles in Geneva. Though Victor is
something of a loner, he does have
one dear friend: Henry Clerval, from
whom he is inseparable. The two have
utterly different ambitions: Victor
has developed a passion for science,
while Henry longs to study the history
of human struggle and endeavor. Eventually,
Victor's parents decide it is time
for him to begin his university studies
at Ingolstadt. Before his departure,
Victor's mother passes away. On her
deathbed, she tells Victor and Elizabeth
that it is her greatest desire to
see the two of them married. Victor
leaves for university, still in mourning
for his mother and troubled by this
separation from his loved ones.
eanwhile, in Geneva, life goes on.
Because Caroline was so generous,
Elizabeth learns to be gracious as
well. When she is old enough to know
her mind, she extends housing and
love to a young girl named Justine,
whose mother dislikes her and wishes
to be rid of her. Though Justine is
a servant in the Frankenstein household,
she is regarded as a sister by Elizabeth,
Ernest and William.
t Ingolstadt, Victor's passion for
science increases exponentially. He
falls into the hands of Waldeman,
a chemistry professor, who excites
in him ambition and the desire to
achieve fame and distinction in the
field of natural philosophy. Thus
begins the mania that will end in
destroying Victor's life. Victor spends
day and night in his laboratory. He
develops a consuming interest in the
life principle (that is, the force
which imparts life to a human being).
This interest develops into an unnatural
obsession, and Victor undertakes to
create a human being out of pieces
of the dead. He haunts cemeteries
and charnel-houses. He tells no one
of this work, and years pass without
his visiting home. Finally, his work
is completed: one night, the yellow
eyes of the creature finally open
to stare at Victor. When Victor beholds
the monstrous form of his creation
(who is of a gargantuan size and a
grotesque ugliness), he is horror-stricken.
He flees his laboratory and seeks
solace in the night. When he returns
to his rooms, the creature has disappeared.
enry joins Victor at school, and the
two begin to pursue the study of languages
and poetry. Victor has no desire to
ever return to the natural philosophy
that once ruled his life. He feels
ill whenever he thinks of the monster
he created. Victor and Clerval spend
every available moment together in
study and play; two years pass.
hen, a letter from Elizabeth arrives,
bearing tragic news. Victor's younger
brother, William, has been murdered
in the countryside near the Frankenstein
estate. On his way back to Geneva,
Victor is seized by an unnamable fear.
Upon arriving at his village, he staggers
through the countryside in the middle
of a lightning storm, wracked with
grief at the loss of his brother.
Suddenly, he sees a figure, far too
colossal to be that of a man, illuminated
in a flash of lightning: he instantly
recognizes it as his grotesque creation.
At that moment, he realizes that the
monster is his brother's murderer.
pon speaking to his family the next
morning, Victor learns that Justine
(his family's trusted maidservant
and friend) has been accused of William's
murder. William was wearing an antique
locket at the time of his death; this
bauble was found in Justine's dress
the morning after the murder. Victor
knows she has been framed, but cannot
bring himself to say so: his tale
will be dismissed as the ranting of
a madman. The family refuses to believe
that Justine is guilty. Elizabeth,
especially, is heartbroken at the
wrongful imprisonment of her cherished
friend. Though Elizabeth speaks eloquently
of Justine's goodness at her trial,
she is found guilty and condemned
to death. Justine gracefully accepts
her fate. In the aftermath of the
double tragedy, the Frankenstein family
remains in a state of stupefied grief.
hile on a solitary hike in the mountains,
Victor comes face to face with the
creature, who proceeds to narrate
what has became of him since he fled
Victor's laboratory. After wandering
great distances and suffering immense
cold and hunger, the monster sought
shelter in an abandoned hovel. His
refuge adjoined the cottage of an
exiled French family: by observing
them, the monster acquired language,
as well as an extensive knowledge
of the ways of humanity. He was greatly
aided in this by the reading of three
books recovered from a satchel in
the snow: Milton's Paradise Lost,
Goethe's The Sorrows of Young Werther,
and a volume of Plutarch's Lives.
The monster speaks with great eloquence
and cultivation as a result of his
limited but admirable education.
e developed a deep love for the noble
(if impoverished) French family, and
finally made an overture of friendship.
Having already learned that his hideous
appearance inspires fear and disgust,
he spoke first to the family's elderly
patriarch: this honorable old gentleman's
blindness rendered him able to recognize
the monster's sincerity and refinement
(irrespective of his appearance).
The other members of the family returned
unexpectedly, however, and drove the
creature from the cottage with stones.
he monster was full of sorrow, and
cursed his creator and his own hideousness.
He therefore determined to revenge
himself upon Frankenstein, whose whereabouts
he had discovered from the laboratory
notebooks. Upon his arrival in Geneva,
the creature encountered William,
whose unspoiled boyish beauty greatly
attracted him. The monster, longing
for companionship, asked William to
come away with him, in the hopes that
the boy's youthful innocence would
cause him to forgive the monster his
ugliness. Instead, William struggled
and called the monster a number of
cruel names; upon learning that the
boy was related to Victor, he strangled
him in a vengeful fury. Drawn to the
beauty of the locket, he took it,
and fled to a nearby barn.
here, he found Justine, who had fallen
into an exhausted sleep after searching
all day and all night for William.
The monster's heart was rent (torn)
by her angelic loveliness, and he
found himself full of longing for
her. Suddenly, he was gripped by the
agonizing realization that he would
never know love. He tucked the locket
into the folds of Justine's dress
in an attempt to seek revenge on all
withholding womankind.
he monster concludes his tale by denouncing
Victor for his abandonment; he demands
that Victor construct a female mate
for him, so that he may no longer
be so utterly alone. If Victor complies
with this rather reasonable request,
he promises to leave human society
forever. Though he has a brief crisis
of conscience, Victor agrees to the
task in order to save his remaining
loved ones.
e journeys to England with Clerval
to learn new scientific techniques
that will aid him in his hateful task.
Once he has acquired the necessary
data, he retreats to a dark corner
of Scotland, promising to return to
Henry when the job is done. Victor
is nearly halfway through the work
of creation when he is suddenly seized
by fear. Apprehensive that the creature
and his mistress will spawn yet more
monsters, and thus destroy humanity,
he tears the new woman to bits before
the monster's very eyes. The creature
emits a tortured scream. He leaves
Victor with a single, most ominous
promise: "I shall be with you
on your wedding night."
ictor takes a small rowboat out into
the center of a vast Scottish lake;
there, he throws the new woman's tattered
remains overboard. He falls into an
exhausted sleep, and drifts for an
entire day upon the open water. When
he finally washes ashore, he is immediately
seized and charged with murder. A
bewildered Victor is taken into a
dingy little room and shown the body
of his beloved Henry, murdered at
the creature's hands. This brings
on a fever of delirium that lasts
for months. His father comes to escort
him home, and Victor is eventually
cleared of all charges.
t home in Geneva, the family begins
planning the marriage of Elizabeth
and Victor. On their wedding night,
Elizabeth is strangled to death in
the conjugal bed. Upon hearing the
news, Victor's father takes to his
bed, where he promptly dies of grief.
aving lost everyone he has ever loved,
Victor determines to spend the rest
of his life pursuing the creature.
This is precisely what the creature
himself wants: now, Frankenstein will
be as wretched and bereft as he is.
For some time, the creator pursues
his creation; he had chased him as
far as the Arctic Circle when he was
rescued by Walton. Though he cautions
the sea captain against excessive
ambition and curiosity, he contradictorily
encourages the sailors to continue
on their doomed voyage, though it
will mean certain death. His reason:
for glory, and for human knowledge.
He finally can no longer struggle
against his illness, and dies peacefully
in his sleep. At the moment of his
death, the creature appears: he mourns
all that he has done, but maintains
that he could not have done otherwise,
given the magnitude of his suffering:
he is "the miserable and the
abandoned, an abortion, to be spurned,
and kicked, and trampled on."
He then flees, vowing that he will
build for himself a funeral pyre and
throw his despised form upon the flames.