CHAPTER XXIV

Chapter 278,246 wordsCompleted

Victor, consumed by grief for William, Justine, Henry Clerval and Elizabeth, makes a solemn vow before the graves in Geneva to hunt the “daemon” (the Creature) until one of them perishes. He abandons Geneva, taking his mother’s jewels, and becomes a wanderer, following vague clues left by the Creature across the Rhone, the Mediterranean, the Black Sea, Tartary, Russia and finally the polar ice fields. Throughout his journey he survives hunger, cold and disease by occasional charity of peasants and what he believes are guiding spirits; the Creature taunts him with ominous inscriptions such as “My reign is not yet over.” In the extreme north Victor reaches a remote hamlet where locals report a gigantic, armed monster that fled onto the sea ice. Victor builds a makeshift ice‑raft, is swept northward, and is rescued by Robert Walton’s Arctic expedition. On Walton’s ship Victor’s health rapidly declines; he suffers fever and weakness, and in a final, feeble address to his sister Margaret he reflects on his crimes, admits that creating the Creature was a “fit of enthusiastic madness,” and confesses he refused to create a female companion. He implores Walton to avoid reckless ambition and seek peace. As Victor lies dying, the Creature appears, grotesque and frantic, delivering a long monologue that recounts its own misery, the murders it committed, its hatred for Victor, and its desire to end its existence. It vows to set itself ablaze on the ice‑raft, disappear into the sea, and leave both creator and monster forgotten. The Creature leaps from the cabin window onto the ice‑raft, is carried away by the waves, and vanishes. Victor dies shortly thereafter, leaving Walton with the promise of an unfinished, vengeful pursuit.