CHAPTER XVI

Chapter 193,206 wordsCompleted

The Creature narrates his descent into vengeance: enraged by the De Lacey family's abandonment, he sets fire to their home and garden, then resolves to seek his creator in Geneva. He traverses harsh winter landscapes, occasionally revived by sunlit spring, which awakens brief feelings of gentleness that are quickly crushed by bitterness. While traveling, he saves a girl from drowning but is shot by a rustic, deepening his hatred. After weeks of suffering he reaches Geneva’s outskirts, hides in fields, and, seeing a child, attempts to seize him as a companion; the child screams, calls him a monster, and the Creature kills him, reveling in the act. He then discovers a sleeping woman in a barn, feels a fleeting attraction to her portrait before his rage returns, and declares that only a being like himself can be his mate. The chapter ends with the Creature demanding that Victor fabricate a female counterpart, lest he remain eternally alone and tormented.