D. The correct answer is me
Victor Frankenstein is the title character and protagonist of Mary Shelley's 1818 novel Frankenstein. As a child, Victor turns out to be a very curious boy with a talent for science and interested in alchemy, as he was an avid reader of the works of Cornelius Agrippa, Paracelsus, and Alberto Magno. These readings make you obsessed with the elixir of life and it is what makes you have an immense desire to create life out of inanimate things.
This desire accompanies him into adulthood, where Victor, after researching and studying for 2 years, manages to create and bring to life a humanoid creature. Victor is immensely proud of his upbringing and immensely happy that he has achieved his ultimate goal, but Victor is terrified of the appearance of his extremely ugly monster. In fear victor runs away and abandons his creation. The monster, saddened by the abandonment, decides to take revenge on Victor by killing his younger brother, Willian.
Victor then becomes embarrassed and sad that he has created something cruel, vengeful and dangerous. he spends the rest of the book trying to find a way to destroy what he has worked so hard to create, and ends up dying with his sadness and regret.
The line you’re referring to I believe is from the poem, “Oh, Captain! My Captain!”
The lines refers to the fact that the North has won the Civil War (in the United States).
I just read a summary of Chapter 10 in The Fellowship of the Ring, .
I think Strider <span> offered to share what he knows with Frodo and give him advice so that Frodo and his friends will accept Strider as their guide.
His exact words to Frodo were:
</span><span>'Don't be alarmed!... I will tell you what I know, and give you some good advice — but I shall want a reward.'</span><span>
'Just this: you must take me along with you, until I wish to leave you.'
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Later on in their conversation, it was revealed that Strider was actually Aragorn and he was a close friend to Gandalf.
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