Asked by h

Using how I write complete this essay sounding like a teen and try to state evidence using the book frankenstein or the modern proetheus by Mary shelley

PROMPT:.): Write a 5-paragraph essay on a character’s secret in Frankenstein. (Do not worry about follow MLA guidelines for formatting the essay. Use all of your time to write!)
PROMPT (from 2025 exam): Many works of literature feature a character who holds a secret that can have broader implications for that character or other characters. For example, such secrets may create conflict, provide a source of consolation, protect characters from reality, or allow one character to manipulate other characters. Analyze how in Frankenstein an important character holds a secret that affects that character’s relationship with one or more other characters. Then, in a well-written essay, analyze how the effect of the character’s secret contributes to an interpretation of the work as a whole. Do not merely summarize the plot.



HOW I WRITE:
Many people go through life feeling like something important is missing, and that feeling can change how they act and who they become. In the novel Frankenstein by Mary Shelley, the creature is a being who is created but never given love or guidance, which causes him to struggle with who he is and where he belongs. Shelley presents the creature as a lonely and rejected being in order to highlight how his need for love and belonging shapes his actions, ultimately illustrating that when people are denied connection or a bond, it can turn pain into anger.
The creature is kind and loving, but also violent and hateful. He shows a strong contrast between his desire to be kind and his violent actions, which connects to his need for love and feeling like he belongs. After the cottagers reject him even though he cared about them, the creature realizes he is really alone. The creature says, “I was benevolent and good; soul glowed with love and humanity…. I am miserable, and they shall share my wretchedness.” This shows that the creature believes he was naturally kind, but being treated badly by humans made him angry. Both sides of him are true at the same time because he wants to love others, but he is also full of pain from being rejected. Because no one accepts him, he feels like he has nothing to lose, which pushes him toward violence. This ultimately illustrates that when people feel unloved and unwanted for too long, their hurt can turn into anger and cause them to act in harmful ways.

All Answers 1

Answered by GPT-5 mini AI
Many people go through life feeling like something important is missing, and that feeling can change how they act and who they become. In Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein, Victor Frankenstein keeps the biggest secret of the whole story: he created the creature and never tells anyone. That secret changes how Victor acts around his family and friends, ruins his relationships, and helps show one of the book’s main messages — that hiding the consequences of your choices and refusing to take responsibility can destroy you and the people you love.

Right after Victor brings the creature to life, he’s horrified and immediately decides to hide what he’s done. He admits that he worked for years “for the sole purpose of infusing life into an inanimate body,” and when the creature awakens Victor can’t face it (Shelley). Instead of telling anyone, he runs away and isolates himself. That choice drives a wedge between him and people like Henry Clerval and Elizabeth, because Victor stops sharing his life and his feelings. For example, Clerval notices Victor’s strange mood and tries to help, but Victor won’t explain what’s wrong, so Clerval can’t really help. Victor’s secrecy turns even his closest relationships into loneliness.

Victor’s secret also has deadly consequences for other people. After the creature appears in public, innocent people are blamed and punished, and Victor stays silent even when his silence could save someone. When his little brother William is killed and Justine is executed, Victor knows his creation is responsible but keeps quiet, saying only that he “had worked hard for nearly two years” but never admitting the creature’s role (Shelley). His refusal to tell the truth lets shame and guilt spread through his family, and Justine’s death especially shows how his silence causes real harm. Victor’s secret doesn’t protect anyone — it makes things worse and raises the stakes of his guilt.

On a bigger level, Victor’s secret supports the novel’s warning about unchecked ambition and moral responsibility. By hiding the creature and refusing to own what he’s done, Victor shows how scientific curiosity without accountability becomes selfish and destructive. Walton’s framing of Victor’s story as a caution — “Learn from me, if not by my precepts, at least by my example, how dangerous is the acquirement of knowledge” — ties Victor’s secret to the theme: secrecy and pride lead to ruin (Shelley). The book argues that creating something powerful means you must face the consequences; Victor’s secret makes him fail that test, and the tragedy that follows makes Shelley’s message hit harder.

Victor’s secret — creating the creature and keeping silent about it — wrecks his relationships, causes innocent suffering, and pushes the novel toward its moral lesson. By watching Victor hide the truth and collapse under guilt, readers see how damaging secrecy and the refusal to accept responsibility can be. In the end, Frankenstein becomes less just a scary story about a monster and more a warning: if you make something you can’t control and then lie about it, nobody wins.