Chapters 20-22: Lonely and Vengeful.... and Actually 21

“Chapter 21” of the suspenseful Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein is left on a cliffhanger when Victor wakes from his rest on the boat to find himself accused for murder. This blog was supposed to start of chapter 20 but I summarized chapter 20 in my previous blog, causing this blog to start on a reveal of the tragic death of Henry Clerval, Victor’s best friend whom he was traveling with. Victor is stuck in prison for a while and proceeds to be sick. On day he gets a visitor, he father comes once he hears the news, eventually, Victor is found innocent and if free to return to Geneva with his father. Once the journey home is completed, there is still the wedding to worry about. Besides planning it, there is also the monster’s threat lingering in an eerie spirit. Victor had a right to worry, because the night before, the monster came to murder yet another person, Elizabeth. The prediction proved itself true, besides this, you can also assume Elizabeth was going to die instead of Victor because of his previous murders. Each death causing him pain, suffering, and most importantly, loneliness. The monster is highly educated, and he has come to learn to think in obscure ways, by ending Victor’s life, he also ends any pain he endures. Instead he goes after loved ones, slowly causing him to grieve over his loss and eventually finding him by himself, just like he did to the monster.

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