Answer:
He used to feel peace and enjoyment from nature during his childhood.
Explanation:
Mary Shelley's "Frankenstein" revolves around a young scientist's zeal to be scientifically advanced, leading to his creation of a monster from human remains. And along the lines of refusing his duty as creator, he inflicted his creature with the most dangerous upbringing, which led to the destruction of his life and family.
In Chapter XIX, Victor Frankenstein and his best friend Henry Clerval arrived in London. Victor had promised the monster that he will create a companion for him in return for a peaceful life without any disruptions from the monster. And in this chapter, Victor recalls his childhood days, stating <em>"during my youthful days discontent never visited my mind"</em>. But the peace and enjoyment of those days no longer accompany him. Rather, he was just full of obligations and a heavy heart, with the need to create another life for the monster he had created.
. The ghost appears to Hamlet and tells Hamlet to revenge<span> his </span>murder<span>; Hamlet feigns madness to his intentions; Hamlet stages the </span>mousetrap play<span>; Hamlet passes up the opportunity to kill Claudius while he is praying.</span>
Answer:
Describe the character Moshe the Beadle. Moshe is awkward, clownish, shy, doesn't talk much but sings, deeply spiritual, very poor, and the community likes him.
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I would say the correct answer is B. primitive man.
The point of the entire novel is that Buck is fighting his urges to go to the wilderness and succumb to his wild identity of a wolf. Thus, dreaming about the primitive man clearly portrays his struggle between his two identities, that of a domesticated dog and that of a wild wolf.