Chapter 3: At the age of seventeen,
Victor plans to advance his education at the university of Ingolstadt. Unfortunately, these plans are
postponed when Elizabeth comes down with the scarlet fever. Though Elizabeth eventually recovers from
the illness, Caroline Frankenstein also becomes sick and she soon dies. Her last words to Victor and
Elizabeth are, "my firmest hopes of future happiness were placed on the prospect of your union. This
expectation will now be the consolation of your father." Victor doesn't really explain his feelings
about the proposed marriage between he and Elizabeth, but he does, however, admit that he is sad to
leave his family, particularly Elizabeth, in so much grief as he goes away to study.
When he finally gets to Ingolstadt, Victor's ideas about
science are lambasted by the professors with whom he speaks. When he tells Professor Krempe that he
has been studying alchemy, the teacher of natural philosophy tells him, "I little expected, in this
enlightened and scientific age, to find a disciple of Albertus Magnus and Paracelsus. My dear sir,
you must begin your studies entirely anew." This, of course, discourages Victor, and though he is saddened
to leave his study of "immortality and power," he eventually agrees to study modern chemistry. By the
end of the chapter, he borrows some books from another professor.
Chapter 4: In this chapter, Victor
continues his studies and begins to put his knowledge into application. Both his professors and his
fellow students marvel at how fast he is absorbing the material. Victor spends two full years doing
little else but study-particularly the concept of the human body. Soon he finds it necessary to spend
many hours alone at the morgue, studying corpses. After several months of this kind of work, Victor
is proud to note that he has found the "cause of generation and life." More than this, however, he's
even discovered how to create life from inanimate objects. Here, Frankenstein takes great pains to
persuade Walton that he is not delusional. But at the same time he admits that his thoughtless enthusiasm
for scientific discovery was a tragic mistake. He implores Walton not to follow his example, warning,
"Learn from me . . . how dangerous is the acquirement of knowledge, and how much happier that man is
who believes his native town to be the world, than he who aspires to become greater than his nature
will allow." Here, Shelley seems to argue that ignorance is bliss.
Victor spends the next few months continuing his painstaking attempts to create life. Shelley doesn't
go into much scientific detail, but her description of Victor's arduous struggle is well taken. Frankenstein
is ecstatic at the idea that he will be the father of a new race of creatures.
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