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CHAPTER XIV

Chapter 171,859 wordsCompleted

The Creature, concealed in a hovel near the De Lacey cottage, tells Victor the full story of the family he has observed. He begins with Mr. De Lacey, a once‑wealthy French noble now blind and impoverished, and his children: Felix, a former soldier, and Agatha, a lady of high society. Their downfall began when Safie’s father, a Turkish merchant, was arrested in Paris and condemned to death for reasons the Creature could not learn, though he suspects religion and wealth. Felix, present at the trial, vows to free the merchant and, after failed attempts, discovers a grate leading to the dungeon. He promises the merchant his hand in marriage to Safie if he is rescued.

Safie’s mother, a Christian Arab enslaved by the Turks, had taught her daughter the virtues of liberty, education, and independence—ideas foreign to the traditional role of women in Islam. After her mother’s death, Safie dreams of escaping a harem, marrying a Christian, and living in a society where women can participate intellectually.

Felix secures false passports with the aid of his father’s sister, arranges an escape route through Paris, Lyon, over Mont Cenis, and to Leghorn (Livorno), where the merchant plans to flee to the Ottoman lands. While the plot proceeds, French authorities discover it; the De Laceys are arrested, tried, and sentenced to permanent exile, losing their fortune.

Betrayed by the merchant, who after escaping sends only a pittance, Felix is left despondent. Safie, refusing to return to Turkey, takes her father’s papers, jewels, and money, and departs from Leghorn with a native attendant. The attendant dies en route, but a compassionate local woman guides Safie to the German cottage where the De Laceys now live. Safie’s arrival brings new life to the family, though they remain in poverty.

Through this tale, the Creature illustrates the capacity for love, sacrifice, cultural clash, and resilience, contrasting the family’s shared suffering with his own solitary existence.

Running Summary
Cumulative summary through the selected chapter (not the full-book final summary).
Through chapter 17

Victor Frankenstein completes his experiment on a storm‑laden night, animating his creature; he briefly hallucinates Elizabeth turning corpse‑like; the newly animated monster reflects on its solitary existence, questions its nature, and confronts Victor with threats of dominance. Added summary of Mary Shelley’s Preface, detailing her childhood storytelling, the 1816 literary gathering, the galvanism discussion, and the nightmare that inspired Frankenstein. Mary Shelley’s Preface recounts her early love of storytelling, the 1816 Lake Geneva gathering with Byron and Percy Shelley, and a vivid nightmare that planted the seed of Frankenstein; Walton’s letters open the novel with his Arctic expedition, his yearning for a kindred spirit, the uncanny sight of a gigantic sled‑man on the ice, and the rescue of a frozen, eloquent European stranger—later identified as the Creature—who hints at a tragic past that will soon intersect with Victor Frankenstein. Victor Frankenstein recounts his Genevese lineage, his father's distinguished public career, the poverty and death of his mother Caroline Beaufort’s father Beaufort, her orphanhood, her marriage to Victor’s father after two years, their extensive travels through Italy, Germany and France, and the adoption of Elizabeth Lavenza—an orphaned, golden‑haired girl from a poor Italian family—who becomes Victor’s beloved sister‑like companion. Victor recounts his harmonious childhood with Elizabeth and his close friendship with Henry Clerval, his parents’ settled life in Geneva and the cottage at Belrive, his early fascination with natural philosophy, his secret study of Agrippa, Paracelsus and Albertus Magnus despite his father’s dismissal, the dramatic thunderstorm that caused a fire in an oak near Belrive and a visiting natural philosopher’s galvanic explanation, and Victor’s subsequent shift from alchemical pursuits to mathematics, feeling destiny urging him onward. Victor’s mother, Caroline Beaufort, dies after nursing Elizabeth through scarlet fever; Victor departs Geneva for Ingolstadt, where he meets Professor Krempe, who condemns his alchemical studies, and Professor Waldman, whose lectures on chemistry inspire Victor to pursue modern natural philosophy and solidify his ambition to uncover the secrets of creation. Victor deepens his study of chemistry under the guidance of Waldman, spends two years in intense research, turns his curiosity toward the secret of life, conducts grisly experiments in charnel houses, and resolves to create a gigantic being, all while his health and family ties deteriorate. Victor brings his creature to life on a stormy night in Ingolstadt, is horrified, flees, experiences a nightmare of Elizabeth and his mother, wanders the city, meets Henry Clerval who nurses him through a prolonged fever; Victor recovers as spring arrives. Victor recovers from his fever, replies to Elizabeth’s long Geneva letter, and, under Henry Clerval’s devoted care, abandons his laboratory work. He endures uncomfortable encounters with Professors Waldman and Krempe, turns to Oriental language studies, and spends summer, winter and spring in Ingolstadt. A fortnight of walks with Clerval restores his health and spirits, culminating in a joyous return to the university and village festivities. Victor returns to Geneva, discovers that his youngest brother William has been murdered, sees the Creature near the scene, and learns that the family’s maid Justine is being accused. He declares her innocent, blames his creation, and vows to protect his family. Victor attends Justine’s trial, sees her falsely condemned for William’s murder, visits her in prison, and endures her execution, deepening his guilt and foretelling further tragedy. Victor is overwhelmed by guilt after Justine’s execution, rejects his father’s counsel, finds brief solace in the Alpine landscape, and departs Geneva for Chamounix where he collapses into exhausted sleep. Victor roams the glacier valley, climbs Montanvert alone, confronts his creation, and, after a heated exchange, agrees to accompany the Creature to a mountain hut to listen to its story. The Creature awakens, discovers fire, seeks shelter, observes a humble family, and experiences a mixture of wonder and anguish. The Creature discovers the De Lacey cottage, observes the blind father, his daughter Agatha and son Felix, learns their language, ceases stealing food, secretly supplies fire‑wood, and feels growing empathy and hope as spring arrives. The creature watches Safie arrive at the De Lacey cottage, learns language and music alongside the family, studies Volney’s Ruins of Empires, and reflects on the dual nature of humanity, deepening his sense of isolation and anguish. The Creature narrates the tragic history of the De Lacey family, the Turkish merchant’s arrest, Felix’s doomed rescue plan, Safie’s educated longing for liberty, the family’s exile, and Safie’s perilous journey to the cottage, deepening the Creature’s insight into human love, betrayal, and suffering.

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