Human nature is good. However, people in the world always judge everything by its "plastic material" and appearance. Even the makers of the monsters themselves can not give the creatures a shred of mercy and care. That's how the final tragedy happened. I can't help thinking that if the protagonist could teach the monster like his own child, would he become a person who could benefit the public? The answer is yes, and the monster then accidentally escaped to an ordinary family and secretly lived in a pigpen, eating pig food but assisting the food that the ordinary family could not get. Unfortunately, in the last misunderstanding, the family that was frightened by the ugly appearance of the monster moved away. Despair for care leaves the monster's heart filled with revenge and hatred. The last monster said the same thing when confronting his maker.
View more about Mary Shelley's Frankenstein reviews