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Frankenstein

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Frankenstein
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  • Chapter 8-9
  • Chapter 9
  • Chapter 10
  • Justine Moritz's trial begins the next morning at 11:00 a.m. While the entire incident unfolds in front of him, Victor is subjected to silent agony. Despite this, he is unable to intervene. Justine responds calmly to the allegations and receives a strong defense from Elizabeth during the trial. Despite Justine's protests to the contrary, she is found guilty. The next day, she will be hanged. Elizabeth and Victor visit Justine in jail, where they find that Justine made a false confession after being interrogated for a long time. Victor is left to consider the killings of two innocent victims while Justine goes to her death fearlessly.
  • Chapter 11
  • At the conclusion of Justine's trial, Victor feels no solace. He can't sleep or rest because he can't stop thinking about how he damaged so many lives. He falls into a profound despair from which he will not be able to recover. He goes for a boat ride on Lake Geneva and a hike in the Swiss Alps. He seeks refuge in the Chamounix valley region to relax and regain his composure.
  • Chapter 12
  • Victor takes a journey of Mount Montanvert, a local peak with a glacier, to replenish his troubled spirit. The monster approaches his creator while on the ice. Victor appears to be ready for a fight to the death, but the monster persuades him to listen to his narrative. The two travel to the monster's filthy mountain home, where the monster begins to relate his story.
  • Chapter 13
  • The creature begins his tale by reminiscing about his childhood and how he came to be. The monster learns to live in the wild after escaping the city and towns where he is not welcome. Food is frequently taken, and shelter is in short supply. He does locate a "hovel" that is linked to a little home. He devises a means of peering into the cottage and begins to monitor the De Lacey family, which consists of brother Felix, sister Agatha, and their blind father.
  • The monster recognizes the family's love and concern for one another, and he perceives a sense of sadness among the youngest members of the family. Poverty and a shortage of food plague the household. The De Laceys were once a well-to-do French family who had been banished to Germany. The monster learns French from his family and puts it into practice on his own. To keep his cottagers pleased, the monster becomes a family member by covertly delivering wood and conducting repairs to the cottage under the cover of darkness. As the seasons change from winter to spring, he begins to follow a regular exercise program.
  • The monster tells the story of Felix reuniting with his long-lost love, Safie, a Turkish woman. Felix had saved Safie's father from execution in France and left her in the care of a nunnery. She is hardly literate when she comes in Germany. Felix is ecstatic to see her once more. Safie makes a sincere effort to learn De Lacey's language, which also helps the monster acquire a language. The monster learns a brief but unforgettable course in European history while listening to the talks in the home. He refers to the De Lacey family as his "protectors" from his hiding location.
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