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Knowledge In Mary Shelley's Frankenstein

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Knowledge can be a creator and a destroyer, and in the novel Frankenstein it plays both roles. In Frankenstein, Victor Frankenstein and the monster he creates share the same deep thirst for knowledge; knowledge that they believe will bring them satisfaction. However as each man learns more about human nature, and in turn themselves, the more disillusioned they become. Victor Frankenstein creates a life with knowledge, however the life he has created has unforeseen consequences. Victor finds himself wishing he never knew how to create life in the first place. The creature Victor creates has a similar experience with knowledge and the experiences that come with it. The monster is alone from inception, leading him to teach himself everything that …show more content…
Through stealing lessons taught a member of the family he discovers, he hears the history of the world and the people in it. He struggles with the idea that humans are “at once so powerful, so virtuous and magnificent, yet so vicious and base” (140) He fights with the idea of inherent evil, and he becomes filled with the complex internal struggles of human nature. The evil in the world and within humans themselves is illuminated to his dismay. His “wonder ceased and he [I] turned away with disgust and loathing.” (141) This shows that as he learns, the wide doors of his open mind slowly begin to close. His longing for the ideal human experience is suddenly clouded, as he realizes there is no such thing. His new found knowledge begins to take away from the magic that accompanied his …show more content…
As each man learns, the more he seeks to discover, sending both down a one way path with no return. Mary Shelley seeks to inform the reader of the dangers of knowing. How can one be happy if he/she is all knowing of every sorrow, happiness, and experience? The two men set down “a lonely road, Doth walk in fear and dread, And, having once turned round, walks on, And turns no more their [his] head; Because they [he] knows a frightful fiend Doth close behind them [him] tread. (Coleridge, Ancient Mariner)(61) Knowledge becomes the frightful fiend in both of their lives, however they both trek on, leaving their ignorant bliss behind in exchange for a life of

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