Frankenstein
Mary Shelley
Characterization
Character
List
Victor Frankenstein -
The doomed protagonist and narrator of the main portion of the story. Studying
in Ingolstadt, Victor discovers the secret of life and creates an intelligent
but grotesque monster, from whom he recoils in horror. Victor keeps his
creation of the monster a secret, feeling increasingly guilty and ashamed as he
realizes how helpless he is to prevent the monster from ruining his life and
the lives of others.
Read an in-depth analysis of Victor Frankenstein.
The monster - The eight-foot-tall, hideously ugly creation
of Victor Frankenstein. Intelligent and sensitive, the monster attempts to
integrate himself into human social patterns, but all who see him shun him. His
feeling of abandonment compels him to seek revenge against his creator.
Robert Walton -
The Arctic seafarer whose letters open and close Frankenstein. Walton picks the bedraggled Victor
Frankenstein up off the ice, helps nurse him back to health, and hears Victor’s
story. He records the incredible tale in a series of letters addressed to his
sister, Margaret Saville, in England.
Read an in-depth analysis of Robert Walton.
Alphonse Frankenstein - Victor’s father, very sympathetic toward his
son. Alphonse consoles Victor in moments of pain and encourages him to remember
the importance of family.
Elizabeth Lavenza - An orphan, four to five years younger than
Victor, whom the Frankensteins adopt. In the 1818 edition of the novel,
Elizabeth is Victor’s cousin, the child of Alphonse Frankenstein’s sister. In
the 1831 edition, Victor’s mother rescues Elizabeth from a destitute peasant
cottage in Italy. Elizabeth embodies the novel’s motif of passive women, as she
waits patiently for Victor’s attention.
Henry Clerval - Victor’s boyhood friend, who nurses Victor
back to health in Ingolstadt. After working unhappily for his father, Henry
begins to follow in Victor’s footsteps as a scientist. His cheerfulness
counters Victor’s moroseness.
William Frankenstein - Victor’s youngest brother and the darling of
the Frankenstein family. The monster strangles William in the woods outside
Geneva in order to hurt Victor for abandoning him. William’s death deeply
saddens Victor and burdens him with tremendous guilt about having created the
monster.
Justine Moritz - A young girl adopted into the Frankenstein
household while Victor is growing up. Justine is blamed and executed for
William’s murder, which is actually committed by the monster.
Caroline Beaufort - The daughter of Beaufort. After her father’s
death, Caroline is taken in by, and later marries, Alphonse Frankenstein. She
dies of scarlet fever, which she contracts from Elizabeth, just before Victor
leaves for Ingolstadt at age seventeen.
Peasants - A family of peasants, including a blind old
man, De Lacey; his son and daughter, Felix and Agatha; and a foreign woman
named Safie. The monster learns how to speak and interact by observing them.
When he reveals himself to them, hoping for friendship, they beat him and chase
him away.
M. Waldman - The professor of chemistry who sparks Victor’s
interest in science. He dismisses the alchemists’ conclusions as unfounded but sympathizes
with Victor’s interest in a science that can explain the “big questions,” such
as the origin of life.
M. Krempe - A professor of natural philosophy at
Ingolstadt. He dismisses Victor’s study of the alchemists as wasted time and
encourages him to begin his studies anew.
Victor Frankenstein
Victor
Frankenstein’s life story is at the heart of Frankenstein. A
young Swiss boy, he grows up in Geneva reading the works of the ancient and
outdated alchemists, a background that serves him ill when he attends
university at Ingolstadt. There he learns about modern science and, within a
few years, masters all that his professors have to teach him. He becomes
fascinated with the “secret of life,” discovers it, and brings a hideous
monster to life. The monster proceeds to kill Victor’s youngest brother, best
friend, and wife; he also indirectly causes the deaths of two other innocents,
including Victor’s father. Though torn by remorse, shame, and guilt, Victor
refuses to admit to anyone the horror of what he has created, even as he sees
the ramifications of his creative act spiraling out of control.
Victor changes over the course of the
novel from an innocent youth fascinated by the prospects of science into a
disillusioned, guilt-ridden man determined to destroy the fruits of his
arrogant scientific endeavor. Whether as a result of his desire to attain the
godlike power of creating new life or his avoidance of the public arenas in
which science is usually conducted, Victor is doomed by a lack of humanness. He
cuts himself off from the world and eventually commits himself entirely to an
animalistic obsession with revenging himself upon the monster.
At the end
of the novel, having chased his creation ever northward, Victor relates his
story to Robert Walton and
then dies. With its multiple narrators and, hence, multiple perspectives, the
novel leaves the reader with contrasting interpretations of Victor: classic mad
scientist, transgressing all boundaries without concern, or brave adventurer
into unknown scientific lands, not to be held responsible for the consequences
of his explorations.
The Monster
The
monster is Victor
Frankenstein’s creation, assembled from old body parts and strange
chemicals, animated by a mysterious spark. He enters life eight feet tall and
enormously strong but with the mind of a newborn. Abandoned by his creator and
confused, he tries to integrate himself into society, only to be shunned
universally. Looking in the mirror, he realizes his physical grotesqueness, an
aspect of his persona that blinds society to his initially gentle, kind nature.
Seeking revenge on his creator, he kills Victor’s younger brother. After Victor
destroys his work on the female monster meant to ease the monster’s solitude,
the monster murders Victor’s best friend and then his new wife.
While Victor feels unmitigated hatred
for his creation, the monster shows that he is not a purely evil being. The
monster’s eloquent narration of events (as provided by Victor) reveals his
remarkable sensitivity and benevolence. He assists a group of poor peasants and
saves a girl from drowning, but because of his outward appearance, he is
rewarded only with beatings and disgust. Torn between vengefulness and
compassion, the monster ends up lonely and tormented by remorse. Even the death
of his creator-turned-would-be-destroyer offers only bittersweet relief: joy
because Victor has caused him so much suffering, sadness because Victor is the
only person with whom he has had any sort of relationship.
Robert Walton
Walton’s
letters to his sister form a frame around the main narrative, Victor
Frankenstein’s tragic story. Walton captains a North Pole–bound ship
that gets trapped between sheets of ice. While waiting for the ice to thaw, he
and his crew pick up Victor, weak and emaciated from his long chase after the
monster. Victor recovers somewhat, tells Walton the story of his life, and then
dies. Walton laments the death of a man with whom he felt a strong, meaningful
friendship beginning to form.
Walton functions as the conduit
through which the reader hears the story of Victor and his monster. However, he
also plays a role that parallels Victor’s in many ways. Like Victor, Walton is
an explorer, chasing after that “country of eternal light”—unpossessed
knowledge. Victor’s influence on him is paradoxical: one moment he exhorts
Walton’s almost-mutinous men to stay the path courageously, regardless of
danger; the next, he serves as an abject example of the dangers of heedless
scientific ambition. In his ultimate decision to terminate his treacherous
pursuit, Walton serves as a foil (someone whose traits or actions contrast
with, and thereby highlight, those of another character) to Victor, either not
obsessive enough to risk almost-certain death or not courageous enough to allow
his passion to drive him.
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