Answer:
He was just a genuis
Explanation:
People may have thought he was insane but he was genuinely a genuis
Answer: I am going to have to study this more then I will comment or answer again if I can!
Explanation:
Answer:
She wants him to care more about her life and talk to her more.
When I eat a pizza for dinner, the first thing I do is smell the dough, the toppings, and the delicious cheese. I look at the pizza, and see the grease dripping from the edges of the dough. I examine the toppings, making sure that no undesirable toppings are on my pizza. I can smell the cheese and the toppings, and my mouth waters at the scent. I pick up the pizza by the crust, grease making my hands oily. I bite into it, the cheese warming the roof of my mouth. The cheese, toppings, sauce, and dough are being chewed in my mouth, and they turn into a symphony of flavor. I swallow, and I take another bite, and another, until I finish the pizza.
Answer:
Walton’s letters to his sister form a frame around the main narrative, Victor Frankenstein’s tragic story. Walton captains a North Pole–bound ship that gets trapped between sheets of ice. While waiting for the ice to thaw, he and his crew pick up Victor, weak and emaciated from his long chase after the monster. Victor recovers somewhat, tells Walton the story of his life, and then dies. Walton laments the death of a man with whom he felt a strong, meaningful friendship beginning to form.
Walton functions as the conduit through which the reader hears the story of Victor and his monster. However, he also plays a role that parallels Victor’s in many ways. Like Victor, Walton is an explorer, chasing after that “country of eternal light”—unpossessed knowledge. Victor’s influence on him is paradoxical: one moment he exhorts Walton’s almost-mutinous men to stay the path courageously, regardless of danger; the next, he serves as an abject example of the dangers of heedless scientific ambition. In his ultimate decision to terminate his treacherous pursuit, Walton serves as a foil (someone whose traits or actions contrast with, and thereby highlight, those of another character) to Victor, either not obsessive enough to risk almost-certain death or not courageous enough to allow his passion to drive him.
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