The Monsters bitterness desires him to make Victor as alone as possible that’s why he kills all of his loved ones. Victor’s ambition eventually causes him to be left with no one. There is no escaping ambition that’s why Victor is suffering. The monster questions Victor on why he created him then abandoned him. Since the monster blames Victor he seeks revenge into making Victor as alone as possible and the monster is successful with that.
Harry Osborn one of the main characters that experienced his two sides. Harry’s late father was the Green Goblin Hating his best friend Peter Parker after thinking that Spiderman killed his father and then later finding out that Peter was Spiderman Harry dedicated his life of getting vengeance, that happened after he had a battle with Spiderman that then came down with amnesia Harry lost all his hatred of Peter then saying that he will do anything for his friends even die for them proving that his hatred for peter was completely based on vengeance after Harry got his memory back Harry then again attempting to kill Peter coming out with the right side of his face burned. Peter then came to ask Harry for help and Harry declined turned Peter down sending him into battle alone until his butler came and told Harry that his father really did kill himself. Harry then came to peters aid to help and at a sun rise throws himself in the way of danger to sacrifice himself for Peter making good on his response “Their my best friends I will die for
He even admitted his evilness to himself stating to Dimmesdale, "I have already told you what I am a fiend!" (Hawthorne 158). The ever growing corruption and evil inside of Chillingworth collided with the good that Dimmesdale, Hester, and Pearl were bringing into the world. Hawthorne hints the innate nature of the good and evil of both sides towards the end of the novel, by describing that Chillingworth is viewed badly by the town but Dimmesdale and Hester are viewed as good people. It is in this way that Roger Chillingworth's specific use in the novel is to portray the conflict good versus evil.
Victor represents society intent on pushing the boundaries and themonster represents the product of this curiosity; of technology gone wrong;technology without ethics. “Accursed creator! Why do you form a monster so hideousthat even you turn away from me in disgust?” The monsters constant rhetoricquestioning addresses these ethics and illuminates the monster as a symbol of innocence in the face of corruption. Victor’s relationships also allow insight into themoral dilemma of creation. Victor’s positive family relationship is juxtaposed againsthis spite for the monster, a somewhat child of his.
He leaves Corinth and travels to Thebes, and on the way he unknowingly kills his father during a quarrel. After saving Thebes from the Sphinx, he is given the hand of Queen Jocasta, his mother, for marriage and he becomes the new king of Thebes. One of the many reasons Oedipus is a coward is that he didn’t want to face his parent s again. His thought at the moment when he blinds himself is that if he killed himself he will see his real parents in the underworld, who he had committed those crimes against. Instead of repenting for his sins he escapes them.
There is Amleth/Hamlet’s dead father, the brother who killed his father and becomes king, the mother who married Amleth/Hamlet’s uncle. There is also the plan to kill his uncle, and the murder of the person behind the curtain in his mother’s bedroom. Also his uncle, now the king, also decides to send Amleth/Hamlet to England, so the King of England will kill him. The king sends two servants to accompany Amleth/Hamlet to England, but they both know the intentions of the trip, but Amleth/Hamlet end up eventually, with much plotting, having both the servants killed. And the last similarity, though not in exact description, is Amleth/Hamlet killing his uncle, the king.
I bent over her and placed the portrait in one of the folds of her dress ”. (Page 132 Line 2-4) The creature not only killed Victor’s younger brother but he framed a girl that was practically Victor’s daughter in a certain light. The pain and suffering wasn’t just Victor’s. His father and Elizabeth felt pain and suffered as a result of what the creature had done. On pages 155 and 156, the wretch goes even further to have his revenge by revealing more terrible plans, including killing Victor’s new wife, Elizabeth.
One of the more important symbols is that of Arnold Friend. He is often thought to represent the devil; a temptation for Connie that she slowly comes to realize is very evil. Arnold Friend is a symbol of temptation that Connie will have to face while trying to find independence and also herself. Connie seems comfortable with Arnold at first but she soon starts to see through his disguise and see’s him for the evil man that he really is. This story also shows the use of foreshadowing, when Connie is off trying to be independent and grown up.
Antigone is the continuation of the play Oedipus, in which foretold disaster strikes a king’s family. Oedipus is told that he will kill his father and marry his mother, so out of fear he flees his home. On the road he meets a man whom he kills and then proceeds to
As the play goes on, Macbeth begins to care less and less about who he kills and just starts killing all of the Thanes around him because he thinks that they are going to kill him. His life starts to fall apart and he goes to see the three witches for a second time. Macbeth even turns on his best friend, Banquo because he remembers the witches saying that Banquo’s children will someday hold the Scottish throne “Then prophet-like they hail’d him father to a line of Kings: Upon my head they placed a fruitless crown” (Macbeth Act 3 63-65). This proves that Macbeth no longer cares about the people who have been his friends and trusted allies for many years. All he now cares about is