In the beginning, Victor Frankenstein created the monster then abandoned him for his physical demeanor. Doing so, Victor unknowingly set forth a wave of destruction. Additionally, the monster states that he learned to be evil by all the rejection correspondingly with the hatred he received. In other words, the measures the monster took to inflict pain on Victor is justified in the eyes of the monster. By killing off every member that was close to his creator, the monster gained the satisfaction of making Victor feel the pain of loneliness. Chiefly, getting rejected by society caused the monster to proceed into a frenzy and blame the person who could avoided all of the monster's suffering. Thereupon, if the monster can cause Victor feel as the monster did throughout the book, that will be the monster's greatest sense of justice.
As …show more content…
The creature realizes and slowly learns how he was built and what drives men. He attains information by observing the De Lacey family. Here, he apprehends that he is not like the humans; even though, he has emotions and process compatible ideas to humankind. The monster's search for justice enhances the cruelness and evilness he is capable of being. Alas, Mary Shelley wanted to her book to show how we, humans, deserve the monsters we create. Surely if society accepted Frankenstein's monster, the outcome of the novel would have been divergent. To illustrate this, take for example, when the monster tired to reach out to the De Lacey family and how he was jilted. From then on, he vowed " If I cannot inspire love, I will inspire fear," straightaway, the pile of bodies