Victor's mother dies by catching the scarlet fever that she helped Elizabeth get rid of.
When her adopted daughter, Elizabeth, contracts the scarlet fever, she nurses her back to health. However, the effort and time weakens Victor's mother and she gets the fever from Elizabeth.
Lightning
Elizabeth is a little girl that Frankenstein's mother instantly falls in love with. Victor and his mother are helping the less fortunate one day when they come to a small cottage. Upon entering it they both instantly develop an affinity for the little child with blond hair and blue eyes. Mrs. Frankenstein asks the mother of the family where the child came from and the mother hastily replies that she is an orphan. The Frankenstein's end up adopting the angelic child.
His mother dies.
In Mary Shelley's Frankenstein, William Frankenstein, Justine Moritz, Henry Clerval, Elizabeth Lavenza-Frankenstein, and Victor Frankenstein (the protagonist) die. Though he does not die anytime WITHIN the novel, the monster is said to had departed for the northernmost ice to purposefully die after its creator (Victor) had died.
Victor's mother asked the peasants she lived with for permission to raise her. (end of chapter 1) She was adopted In southern Italy by Caroline Frankenstein.
William Frankenstein- the creator not the monster's sonJustine Moritz- the Frankensteins' maid servantHenry Clerval- Frankenstein's best friendElizabeth Lavenza- Frankenstein's brideAlphonse- Frankenstein's fatherVictor Frankenstein himself dies
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In the Wordsworth Classics edition of "Frankenstein," Victor Frankenstein's mother dies when he is 17 years old. Her death is a significant moment in the story, as it contributes to Victor's sense of loss and grief that propel him into his obsessive quest for creating life.
frankenstein didn't have a mother. he was created by Dr. Frankenstein.
Jan Victors died in 1676.
Frankenstein's mother, William, Justine, Henry Clerval, Elizabeth, Frankenstein's father, Frankenstein, the monster
Elizabeth is a little girl that Frankenstein's mother instantly falls in love with. Victor and his mother are helping the less fortunate one day when they come to a small cottage. Upon entering it they both instantly develop an affinity for the little child with blond hair and blue eyes. Mrs. Frankenstein asks the mother of the family where the child came from and the mother hastily replies that she is an orphan. The Frankenstein's end up adopting the angelic child.
Elizabeth is Victors wife, and she loves him, but is often annoyed by his scientific pursuits.
His mother died of scarlet fever, and Frankenstein left for Ingolstadt. (His college)
Karl Frankenstein died in 1990.
Victor's dad, Alphonse Frankenstein, dies in Chapter 37 of Mary Shelley's novel "Frankenstein".
As with all 19th century literature it is long on description, setting and philosophy - many people now-a-days find that boring and hard to get through. You have to approach it with the attitude that it will require 'slow and careful' reading, not something that today's literary body is willing to do. If you can 'get-by' that or (like more elite readers) can appreciate it, then yes, it is quite in-depth and provocative.
On childbirth delivering her last child. Who the monster killed as a young boy.