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CHAPTER III

Chapter 62,680 wordsCompleted

Victor recounts that just as he was to leave for the University of Ingolstadt, tragedy strikes: Elizabeth falls ill with scarlet fever, and while she recovers thanks to his mother’s devoted care, Caroline Beaufort succumbs to a fever and dies peacefully on her death‑bed, expressing her hopes for Victor and Elizabeth’s future. Overwhelmed by grief yet bound by duty, Victor delays his departure briefly before finally boarding a carriage, accompanied by his father, his beloved Elizabeth, and his close friend Henry Clerval, who unsuccessfully seeks permission to accompany him. Upon arriving in Ingolstadt, Victor is assigned a solitary apartment and begins to explore the city. He soon attends a lecture by M. Krempe, a coarse professor of natural philosophy, who harshly criticises Victor’s previous studies of Agrippa, Paracelsus and Albertus Magnus, deeming them outdated nonsense and demanding he abandon them for modern science. Krempe provides a reading list of contemporary works and schedules a course in natural philosophy. Disenchanted but undeterred, Victor later attends a lecture by M. Waldman, a kindly professor of chemistry whose eloquent praise of modern chemical advances and gracious demeanor profoundly move Victor. Waldman’s lecture extols the achievements of recent scientists and dismisses alchemical “miracles,” igniting in Victor a fervent resolve to master chemistry and “pioneer a new way” in the “deepest mysteries of creation.” After the lecture, Victor meets Waldman privately, discusses his past alchemical interests, and receives the professor’s encouragement to study all branches of natural philosophy, including mathematics. Waldman invites Victor to his laboratory, explains the use of his apparatus, and promises access to his equipment as Victor advances. The encounter convinces Victor that his destiny lies in scientific discovery, cementing his determination to pursue the study that will later lead to the creation of the Creature.

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Through chapter 6

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.

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