Yielding The Creature In Mary Shelley's Frankenstein

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In Frankenstein, the main character Victor gains an interest in reanimation and begins attempting to put life back into the dead after losing loved ones himself. One day his experiment becomes successful, yielding the Creature, who for obvious reasons is feared greatly and a regretful creation in Victor Frankensteins mind. Shelley’s use of unsettling diction, imagery, detail, and syntax convey Victor’s regret and disgust like attitude towards the creature.

Victor experiences a great desire for reanimation, “with an ardor that far exceeded moderation” showcasing that at first, great passion is felt when creating the Creature. A semicolon is later used as Victor continues to explain how “now that [he] had finished, the beauty of the dream vanished,

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