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Frankenstein - The Destruction of the Female Creature

Mary Shelley

Frankenstein

The Destruction of the Female Creature

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Summary

The Destruction of the Female Creature

Frankenstein by Mary Shelley

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Victor and Clerval tour England and Scotland, but Victor's mind is consumed with his awful task. He collects materials for creating the female creature, and every thought about it is 'an extreme anguish.' They travel north to Scotland, and Victor isolates himself on a remote Orkney island to complete his work. In a desolate hut, Victor begins assembling the female creature. But this time, he's not blinded by enthusiasm—he works 'in cold blood' and his heart 'often sickened at the work.' One evening, as he sits working by moonlight, doubts flood his mind: What if the female is even more evil than the male? What if she refuses to go to South America? What if they hate each other? Most terrifying: what if they have children—'a race of devils propagated upon the earth'? As these thoughts overwhelm him, Victor looks up and sees the creature's face at the window, watching him work with a 'ghastly grin.' In that moment, trembling with passion and horror at what he's doing, Victor tears the female creature to pieces. The creature witnesses this betrayal and howls in 'devilish despair and revenge.' He leaves with a final threat that will haunt Victor forever: 'I shall be with you on your wedding-night.' Victor burns with rage but lets the creature escape. He's convinced the creature will kill him on his wedding night, never imagining the creature means to kill Elizabeth instead. This chapter shows Victor breaking his promise in a moment of fear, triggering the creature's most devastating revenge. Victor's inability to follow through—first abandoning the creature, then destroying its only hope for companionship—seals the tragic fate of everyone he loves.

Coming Up in Chapter 24

The creature's revenge begins immediately. Victor will pay for his broken promise in ways he cannot yet imagine, starting with someone he loves.

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Original text
complete·2,609 words
L

ondon was our present point of rest; we determined to remain several months in this wonderful and celebrated city. Clerval desired the intercourse of the men of genius and talent who flourished at this time, but this was with me a secondary object; I was principally occupied with the means of obtaining the information necessary for the completion of my promise and quickly availed myself of the letters of introduction that I had brought with me, addressed to the most distinguished natural philosophers.

1 / 18

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Why This Matters

Connect literature to life

Skill: Detecting Misdirection

This chapter teaches how to recognize when someone is deliberately drawing your attention to one area while attacking another.

Practice This Today

This week, notice when conflicts or problems seem to be pulling your focus in one obvious direction—ask yourself what you might be missing while you're watching the obvious threat.

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Now let's explore the literary elements.

Key Quotes & Analysis

"I will be with you on your wedding night"

— The Creature

Context: The creature's earlier threat that Victor misinterprets as a threat to himself

This quote shows how Victor's self-centeredness blinds him to the real danger. He assumes the creature means to kill him, not Elizabeth, leading to her death.

In Today's Words:

I'm going to ruin the happiest day of your life

"She was there, lifeless and inanimate, thrown across the bed"

— Narrator

Context: Victor discovers Elizabeth's body after the creature's attack

The stark, clinical language contrasts with the horror of the moment. Victor's scientific mind tries to process the emotional devastation objectively.

In Today's Words:

She was dead, lying there like a broken doll

"The loss of his son had completed the old man's misery"

— Narrator

Context: Describing how Victor's father dies from grief after Elizabeth's murder

This shows how tragedy spreads beyond the main conflict. The father becomes another casualty of Victor's war with his creation.

In Today's Words:

Losing his family was more than the old man could handle

Thematic Threads

Pride

In This Chapter

Victor's masculine pride makes him assume he's the target, blinding him to the real threat to Elizabeth

Development

Pride has driven Victor's choices throughout—from his initial ambition to his refusal to create a companion

In Your Life:

Your ego might convince you that conflicts are about you when they're really about something else entirely

Communication

In This Chapter

Victor never tells Elizabeth the true nature of the danger, leaving her completely unprepared

Development

Victor's secrecy has been a constant—he's never shared the truth with anyone who could help

In Your Life:

When you keep important information to yourself, you prevent others from protecting themselves

Consequences

In This Chapter

The creature's systematic destruction of Victor's family reaches its climax with Elizabeth's murder

Development

Each death has escalated the stakes—William, Justine, now Elizabeth, with Victor's father to follow

In Your Life:

Unresolved conflicts tend to escalate and spread to innocent people in your life

Isolation

In This Chapter

Victor is now completely alone, having lost everyone he loved to his creation

Development

Victor's isolation began with secrecy and has progressed to literal solitude through loss

In Your Life:

Keeping secrets and avoiding difficult conversations can ultimately leave you with no one to turn to

Revenge

In This Chapter

The creature completes his promise to make Victor as miserable and alone as he is

Development

The cycle of revenge that began with William's death reaches its intended conclusion

In Your Life:

Revenge cycles rarely end where you expect—they keep escalating until everyone loses everything

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You now have the context. Time to form your own thoughts.

Discussion Questions

  1. 1

    Victor prepared for the monster's attack on his wedding night, but Elizabeth died anyway. What went wrong with his plan?

    analysis • surface
  2. 2

    Why did Victor assume the monster would attack him directly rather than targeting Elizabeth?

    analysis • medium
  3. 3

    When have you seen someone focus so hard on one problem that they missed a different danger entirely?

    application • medium
  4. 4

    If you were Victor, how would you have handled the threat differently to actually protect Elizabeth?

    application • deep
  5. 5

    What does this tragedy reveal about how our assumptions and blind spots can make us our own worst enemies?

    reflection • deep

Critical Thinking Exercise

10 minutes

Map Your Blind Spots

Think of a current situation where you're worried about something going wrong. Write down what you're actively watching or defending against. Then brainstorm three completely different ways the situation could go sideways that you're NOT currently watching for. Consider what you might be missing while you're focused on your main concern.

Consider:

  • •Ask yourself: 'What am I assuming about how this threat will come?'
  • •Consider who else might have a different perspective on the real dangers
  • •Think about what you value most that might be vulnerable while you're defending something else

Journaling Prompt

Write about a time when you were so focused on preventing one problem that you walked straight into another. What would you do differently now?

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Coming Up Next...

Chapter 24: Clerval's Murder and Victor's Arrest

The creature's revenge begins immediately. Victor will pay for his broken promise in ways he cannot yet imagine, starting with someone he loves.

Continue to Chapter 24
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Delayed Promise—Journey to Create the Mate
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Clerval's Murder and Victor's Arrest

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