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Alphonse Frankenstein

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Summary of Alphonse Frankenstein's Character

Alphonse Frankenstein is Victor's father. He is a respectable man from an affluent background and is very supportive of his son. He also loves his adopted daughter, Elizabeth, very much.

Supportive parent

Supportive parent

  • Although Alphonse can seem distant and formal in his letters to Victor, he is a supportive parent.
    • He sends Victor to university, facilitating his education.
    • He is always there to help Victor and remind him of the importance of family, even when Victor is neglectful.
    • He wants Victor to achieve happiness through his marriage to Elizabeth.
Compassionate man

Compassionate man

  • The compassionate behaviour of Alphonse as a father to Victor helps to highlight Victor's own lacking in his role as a parent to the Monster.
    • The shock and stress of Elizabeth's murder leads to Alphonse's death, whereas Victor actively tries to destroy his creation.

Alphonse Frankenstein - Key Quotations

Alphonse Frankenstein is Victor's father. He is a respectable man from an affluent background and is very supportive of his son. He also loves his adopted daughter, Elizabeth, very much.

Emotionally understanding

Emotionally understanding

  • 'I confess, my son, that I have always looked forward to your marriage with our dear Elizabeth as the tie of our domestic comfort, and the stay of my declining years. […] You, perhaps, regard her as your sister, without any wish that she might become your wife.' (Volume Three: Chapter 1).
    • Alphonse is willing to accept that marriage to Elizabeth may not be what Victor wants.
    • Alphonse is presented as being thoughtful and emotionally understanding to present the caring parenting from which Victor benefits.
    • This contrasts to how Victor treats the Monster.
Supportive parenting

Supportive parenting

  • '"My father!" cried I, while every feature and every muscle was relaxed from anguish to pleasure: "is my father indeed come? How kind, how very kind!"' (Volume Three: Chapter 4).
    • Alphonse cares so deeply for his son that he travels to Ireland to offer support to Victor whilst he is sick and imprisoned.
    • Victor's enthusiastic response to hearing of his father's presence demonstrates the positive impact supportive parenting can have.
Shock of family deaths

Shock of family deaths

  • 'He could not live under the horrors that were accumulated around him; the springs of existence suddenly gave way: he was unable to rise from his bed, and in a few days he died in my arms.' (Volume Three: Chapter 6).
    • Alphonse is presented as being sensitive to the shock of the deaths of his close family members.
    • Shelley is careful to make the connection between these deaths and Alphonse's own demise to suggest that Alphonse's death is another effect of Victor's ongoing battle with his creation.
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Plot Summaries

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Characters

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Key Themes

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Authorial Method

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Context

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Recap: Main Quotes

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