Friday, October 1, 2010


He’s going to cry in the car

In My Chris Tucker’s Voice “He’s going to cry in the car.” “He sprung from the cabin-window, as he said these, upon the ice-raft which lay close to the vessel. He soon borne away by the waves, and lost in darkness and distance” (Shelley 156). The fiend may have experienced sadness, not because his arch nemesis had passed away. Maybe he was said because he had lost the closest creature that he had ever known as a creator or father.

“Am I thought to be thought the only criminal, when all human kind sinned against me” (Shelley 155)? The monster shows that he is passionate about what he has done. It almost seems like his killing spree or “mischief” as he calls it was his life’s mission and now that it’s coming to an end he’s reflecting. I view it as almost comical that the monster gets to chose to live. Yet he seemingly takes his own life as he jumps overboard and is swept away by the waves and current.

In the end Frankenstein loses his family, friends and his creation. This seems like a high price to pay to explore uncharted territory in the name of science. I mean dab gum couldn’t the man had gotten the some type of parade for him before he died. I mean did all that hard work go unrewarded? This Victor wanted to play God, then he wanted to do away with his creation all together. But his creation ended up destroying him. This just seems unfair.

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