Answer:
Both try to keep their promise, but cruel fate separates them, and they are killed. However, their souls reunite after death. It mainly illustrates how one can easily embrace death for the sake of love.
It looks like you answered your own question, but they also change the theme of the story from one of abandonment, control, and approval/validation.
Frankenstein creates his monster after his mother dies, leaving him feeling abandoned.
His creation is an attempt to give life without the need for a woman (controlling life).
The monster spends much of the story seeking validation from his creator, who wants nothing to do with him. In some sense, this parallels Victor's inability to cope with his mother's loss, except that Victor is still very much alive. I'm sure many people view this as a religious allegory (God abandoning humans).
I don't recall catching any of that in the movies. Instead, they turn it into the typical battle against the unknown/unfamiliar. The monster is not understood, and is grotesque looking, so the people want it gone. Of course, none of the pitchforks and torches are ever carried in the novel.
Of course, there's also the issue of Frankenstein's presentation on screen. In the book, he's clearly described as being yellow; yet, in most of the movies, he's green. Oh, and Frankenstein never yells "it's alive!"
Answer:
D) Nightmare, Shivers, Afraid, Scuttles, Dreaded.
The amicable spirit was brought down by Harper's fake adulation.
In the Canterbury tale by Geoffrey Chaucer, the reader can infer the monk's character based on the fact that all of his stories contain the same tragic moral is that he loses himself in the sermon he is preaching to the audience.
The monk's tale fits the category of the parable because it tells the results of different people's good and bad behavior. The Monk tale is a series of tragedies that represents the news that wealth and position are just an illusion. He refers to the example of many falling from high to low ends, such as the example of Lucifer falling from heaven. Through such examples and stories, he continues to show the people who have fallen from grace.
The model of tragedies that Monk offers is a Boethian one that is which is a reminder of the versatility of life itself, to bring on top to those who are crashing down on the grounds and that the tendency of the feminine, whimsical fortune to spin her wheels. Hence, it is a simple narrative and Boethian reminder that high status often ends inadequately.
For more information on the monk's character click on the link below:
brainly.com/question/24671804
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