Victor Frankenstein <8K 2027>
In the popular imagination, “Frankenstein” is the green-skinned monster with bolts in his neck. But the true monster—and the far more complex figure—is the man who gave the creature life: .
He enrolls at the University of Ingolstadt, excels in chemistry and alchemy, and discovers how to animate lifeless matter. For months, he works in “filthy creation,” robbing graves and slaughterhouses. He is so consumed by the act of making that he never asks if he should . Victor Frankenstein
When Mary Shelley published her novel in 1818, she created something unprecedented: a scientist whose ambition overrides his morality. Two centuries later, Victor remains terrifyingly relevant—not because he builds a creature from corpses, but because he refuses to take responsibility for what he has made. Victor Frankenstein is no villain at the outset. Raised in a loving Geneva family, he is brilliant, curious, and consumed by the mysteries of life and death. After his mother dies of scarlet fever, grief twists his intellect into obsession. For months, he works in “filthy creation,” robbing
The creature, left to learn language, pain, and rejection on its own, becomes violent because of Victor’s neglect. When the monster later confronts its maker on the Mer de Glace glacier, it speaks with devastating clarity: he chooses silence over confession.
He tells himself he would not be believed. But the reader knows: Victor is protecting his reputation more than his family. The novel’s second half becomes a Gothic chase across Europe. After the creature murders Victor’s bride Elizabeth on their wedding night, Victor vows revenge. He pursues his creation to the Arctic, where he is rescued by Captain Walton—to whom he tells his entire story.
Yet his fatal flaw is not ambition—it is cowardice . Again and again, he chooses silence over confession. When his younger brother William is murdered by the creature, Victor knows the truth but says nothing. When family friend Justine is executed for the crime, he lets her die.
“Learn from me… how dangerous is the acquirement of knowledge, and how much happier that man is who believes his native town to be the world, than he who aspires to become greater than his nature will allow.”