The creature and the bonsai tree are equals and Victor Frankenstein and the gardener are equals. Both the creature and the bonsai tree are in desperate want of something that both of them will not get; freedom. Victor Frankenstein and the gardener are both the ones putting burdens on freedom of the things that they “own”. (Victor Frankenstein and his creature, the gardener and his bonsai tree). “All men hate the wretched; how then, must I be hated, who am miserable beyond all living things! Yet you, my creator, detest and spurn me, thy creature, to whom thou art bound by ties only dissoluble by the annihilation of one of us” (Shelley 95). The creature right here shows how much he feels trapped and shows how much freedom he has which is none. . “It is your nature to be small and cozy, domestic and weak;” (Piercy 12-14). The gardener holds back the tree just like how Victor holds back the creature. The bonsai tree has the opportunity to grow out to be 80 feet tall on the side of a mountain top, but the gardener holds it back and cuts it each day. The creature could have a partner and not harm another soul and just be free after he receives that partner, but Victor Frankenstein holds him back and destroys the starts of a new creature. Both the creature from Frankenstein and the bonsai tree from “A Work of Artifice” hold similar traits and characteristics. Victor Frankenstein, the creature’s creator, and the gardener, the bonsai tree’s creator hold similar traits and characteristics as
The creature and the bonsai tree are equals and Victor Frankenstein and the gardener are equals. Both the creature and the bonsai tree are in desperate want of something that both of them will not get; freedom. Victor Frankenstein and the gardener are both the ones putting burdens on freedom of the things that they “own”. (Victor Frankenstein and his creature, the gardener and his bonsai tree). “All men hate the wretched; how then, must I be hated, who am miserable beyond all living things! Yet you, my creator, detest and spurn me, thy creature, to whom thou art bound by ties only dissoluble by the annihilation of one of us” (Shelley 95). The creature right here shows how much he feels trapped and shows how much freedom he has which is none. . “It is your nature to be small and cozy, domestic and weak;” (Piercy 12-14). The gardener holds back the tree just like how Victor holds back the creature. The bonsai tree has the opportunity to grow out to be 80 feet tall on the side of a mountain top, but the gardener holds it back and cuts it each day. The creature could have a partner and not harm another soul and just be free after he receives that partner, but Victor Frankenstein holds him back and destroys the starts of a new creature. Both the creature from Frankenstein and the bonsai tree from “A Work of Artifice” hold similar traits and characteristics. Victor Frankenstein, the creature’s creator, and the gardener, the bonsai tree’s creator hold similar traits and characteristics as