Frankenstein Nick Dear 2nd Edition
Frankenstein Nick Dear 2nd Edition
Frankenstein Nick Dear 2nd Edition
By
Nick Dear
Based on the novel by Mary Shelley
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Characters: The Creature, Victor Frankenstein a scientist, Gretel, a prostitute, De Lacey a
blind man, Felix his son, Agatha, his daughter-in-law, The Female Creature, Elizabeth
Lavenza Victor’s fiancée, Clarice Her maid, William Frankenstein Victor’s brother,
Monsieur Frankenstein Victor’s father, Ewan an Orkney islander, Rab His nephew, A
Constable, Townspeople Of Ingolstadt, Servants of the Frankenstein household.
Back to darkness
Another blast of light. Struggling to free himself is the Creature, who is naked and
leaking blood as he rips the tubes out of his veins.
BOM-BOOM. BOM-
BOOM. Then darkness.
Light: the Creature has got down from the frame. He squats on the floor. He seems
confused. He has no speech and his movements are erratic. Spurts of blood come from
the sutures in his skin.
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The Creature crawls across the floor, tries to stand up. He struggles to keep his balance
and take a few steps.
He falls. He lies still. Then he tries again.
The Creature spins like a top, on his tailbone, pushing himself round and round and
round. And round and round some more.
He stands, and is dizzy. He falls over. He laughs.
CREATURE : Hawuurgh!
VICTOR : Do as I say!
The Creature lunges at Victor, as if to embrace him, or maybe to strangle him-who
knows? Victor panics. He has nothing with which to defend himself. He pulls the cloak
from his shoulders and throws it over the Creature, and runs from the building. Blinded,
the Creatures roars, spinning round and round, confused. He pulls the cloak
from his head. But Victor is gone.
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SCENE THIRD Part 1: CREATURE, PASSENGERS
Night. The Creature makes his way through the streets of Ingolstadt---an early-
industrial landscapes, smoggy and strange.
He’s wrapped in the cloak, the cowl covering his head. Underneath he is naked. There
are strange noises---sounds of forges, factories, coaches, animals. Electricity is in the air;
we see prototypes of new machines. The Creature is lost and confused. There are passers-
by, but they ignore him.
He passes a tavern. A group of townsmen are singing, drinking mugs of beer. This
scares the Creature and he runs away.
Then there is a sound which arrests him: a woman is screaming.
The Creature stops and listens. The passers-by slip away. He is alone on the street.
CREATURE : Hnungh?
Now we see Gretel, a prostitute, being beaten up by her client in a dark alley.
The Creature doesn’t know how to respond. He turns this way and that. Gretel is being
thrown about by her hair. The Creature walks slowly towards them and watches with
curiosity. Gretel sees him.
Oh, thank you, mister, thank you!
The client looks round and sees the Creature behind him. The Creature raises both
hands in the air and spins round and round. It’s scary-unintentionally so. The client
dumps Gretel on the ground and runs. She picks herself up and dusts down her skirts. She
doesn’t get a good look at the Creature yet.
One good turn deserves another. Want to come with me? I’ve got wine. We can drink.
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She swigs from a flagon of wine, and beckons him.
The Creature goes to her and immediately drops to his knees and puts his nose to her
vagina and sniffs, hard.
Here, what are you playing at? Give us a kiss, at least! Christ!
Gretel pulls him to his feet and pushes back the cowl from his head. She goes to kiss
him---but then she sees his face. She gasps, and takes a step backwards.
The Creature stands with his arms at his sides, smiling. Gretel backs away slowly,
trying to stay as calm as she can.
I’m not going to scream. I’m just going to walk away. All right, mister? Just walking
away. All right?
Finally Gretel turns and runs. The Creature doesn’t notice. He’s busy examining the
wine she left behind. He takes a swig. He spits it out: it’s disgusting.
The Creature is on the outskirts of the town. Dogs bark. He turns to look back. In the
distance we can see the lights and towers of Ingolstadt.
Several townsmen run towards him. They keep their distance. The Creature stares at
them uncertainly.
MAN : There it is!
Dawn. Countryside. The Creature is asleep on the ground, wrapped in the cloak.
He wakes, stiffly. He moans and sits up.
He stands and looks around. The cloak falls and he is naked. Sunlight plays through the
leaves. The birds sing. He clutches at beams of light. He laughs.
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CREATURE : Huh, huh!
He’s Adam in the Garden of Eden---an innocent. He listens to the birdsong. He tries to
flap his wings.
He imitates birdsong.
Rain falls. The gentle touch of moisture pleases him. He washes himself in the rain. He
dries himself with his cloak.
In the pocket of his cloak he finds a battered notebook: Frankenstein’s journal. He looks
at the writing from several different viewpoints but it remains meaningless. He stuffs it
back into his pocket.
He stands and addresses us: a speech of confusion and sometimes distress, but without
actual words. A soliloquy of grunts and wails.
CREATURE : Wurrgh-ah-ah! Wurgh, wurgh. Chick chick. Awah? Yaya yaya! Yuh!
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KLAUS : Nice bit of rabbit. Where’d you get to?
GUSTAV : Ingolstadt.
KLAUS : Any luck?
GUSTAV : No. They’re jittery as hell. The women and children are locked indoors. The
men go armed with cudgels. What’s going on?
Klaus (shrugs): Scared of their own shadows, they are, in Ingolstadt.
They laugh and sit by the fire. Klaus stirs the stew in the billy-can.
GUSTAV : Tomorrow we’ll move on. Try and beg some bread.
KLAUS : This is all right, though, nice bit of rabbit.
GUSTAV : A man needs bread.
KLAUS : I met a woman in Augsburg once, her husband was a baker. I hung around
Augsburg for a very long time.
GUSTAV : Nice place, Augsburg.
CREATURE : Gnnah.
The beggars leap to their feet. The Creature advances towards them. They pull back,
scared.
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The Creature points to the pan of food hanging over the fire.
The beggars run away. The Creature tries to pick up the pan, but it’s hot and burns his
hand. He yelps with pain. But he wants the food. He experiments with the wooden
spoon. He finds that with it he can bring food to his mouth. He eats. Now he examines
the fire. It’s nice. But when he puts his hand in it, it’s not nice.
He sees that the beggars have left their knapsacks behind. He pulls out the content---
tattered clothes, a ball of string, a pipe, a Bible. None of these mean much to him. He
Morning. The Creature wakes to the sound of the two beggars yelling. They run
at him, brandishing sticks.
CREATURE : Waaagh!
GUSTAV : I’ll teach you to scare us!
KLAUS : Eat our supper!
GUSTAV : Now piss off, you ugly bastard!
KLAUS : And don’t come back!
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They drive the Creature away. The beggars collect up their belongings and
exit hurriedly.
Deep in the woods, the Creature howls with pain. He is angry and confused. He spins
round and round, shrieking in anguish.
De Lacey’s cottage. Felix, his son, guides blind De Lacey to his chair, as his daughter-in-
law Agatha places food on the table.
AGATHA : I’m leaving your food on the table. And there’s some milk.
DE LACEY : Thank you, my dear. You treat me well.
FELIX : We’re going to work, Father. We’ll be back at nightfall.
Agatha (to De Lacey): And you, behave yourself while we’re gone.
De Lacey (chuckles): I’ll try. --- Have you managed to clear the top field?
FELIX : No. It’s slow progress.
AGATHA : Harder than we thought. (Cheerily.) But we’ll win in the end!
DE LACEY : We have to grow something or we’ll starve.
AGATHA : We’ll get faster when we know what we’re doing. In a year or two, we’ll be
fine. We’ll be farmers!
De Lacey (laughs): I never thought I’d be a farmer…!
Felix (to Agatha): Are you ready?
AGATHA : For the cold and the mud? Can’t wait!
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FELIX : Goodbye, Father.
FELIX : I know.
AGATHA : Bye!
Agatha and Felix exit the hut. De Lacey reaches behind him and takes up a guitar. He
puts it across his knee and begins to play.
Felix and Agatha come outside. The Creature looks on from a distance. He now
wears ragged clothes under his cloak. He watches intently.
The Creature watches them go. Very cautiously he makes his way to the hut. He
hovers in the doorway, captivated by the guitar music. De Lacey, hearing something,
stop playing.
DE LACEY : Take the food if you want it. There’s nothing else worth taking. Oh, there
are books, I suppose. At least they have left me my books.
De Lacey leans his guitar against the wall. The Creature seems to grasp that he’s not in
danger.
You’ve no reason to harm me. I won’t hurt you. I can’t see you. I don’t fight on any
side. Go on, citizen, take the food.
CREATURE : Hnnargh?
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De Lacey indicates the table. The Creature stuffs food in his mouth.
DE LACEY : Can’t you talk? Maybe you can’t. It’s nothing to be ashamed of. Look at me
—I’m blind. There was a cannonball and I – I went blind. Now my son looks after me.
You look after them when they’re little, they look after you when you’re old. That’s the
way it is. But we fell on hard times, when the soldiers came through. When people are
not oppressed, they’re full of brotherly love; but when times are hard…well, then you
find out who your friends are, don’t you?
The Creature, having finished the food, picks up the guitar. He tries clumsily to strum it,
but just makes a horrible noise. He claws hopelessly at the strings, then cries out in
frustration.
DE LACEY : Oh, you want music? You want some more music?
CREATURE : Mm…moo…
DE LACEY : Music. It’s a gift from God. Go on. Say it. Music.
CREATURE : Moo…sic…
DE LACEY : You see, you pluck the strings, like this…
Agatha and Felix survey the top field. Felix carries a hoe over his shoulder.
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FELIX : I’m sorry, Agatha. It has to be cleared. I can’t plough until it’s done.
AGATHA : Oh well—the sooner I start!
She smiles and kisses Felix. Felix exits. Agatha begins to work. She sings.
She has the feeling that she’s being watched. But when she looks around, she can’t see
anyone.
Agatha remains working in the field as we cut back to:
The cottage. The Creature and De Lacey sit together at the table. They have paper and
charcoal pencils before them. De Lacey scrawls a letter and the Creature imitates him.
DE LACEY : Puh.
CREATURE : Puh.
DE LACEY : Ah.
CREATURE : Ah.
DE LACEY : Ruh.
CREATURE : Ruh.
DE LACEY : Ah.
CREATURE : Ah.
DE LACEY : Duh.
CREATURE : Duh.
DE LACEY : Aye.
CREATURE : Aye.
DE LACEY : Sss.
CREATURE : Sss.
DE LACEY : Eh.
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CREATURE : Eh.
DE LACEY : Para—
CREATURE : Para—
De Lacey feels the Creature’s head. The Creature is at first tense, but then relaxes.
DE LACEY : My, you have been in the wars. What happened to you? Where are you
from? Where are your mother and father?
The Creature has lost interest, and concentrates happily on his writing.
CREATURE : Par-a-dise. Hnagh!
De Lacey sighs.
The cottage. Weeks later. De Lacey and the Creature. The Creature is distracted by the
snow swirling outside the window.
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DE LACEY : That’s snow. It’s not very interesting—a natural phenomenon, no more.
Now please stop leaping about, we need to concentrate.
CREATURE : Snow! Snow!
DE LACEY : There are two school of thought. One says that we are all made imperfect,
and require the assistance of a higher authority—a deity—to overcome the sin of being
born. The other school of thought—to which I subscribe—insists that when we leave the
womb we are pure, that a babe in arms is untainted by sin, that evil is the product of
social forces, and that God has nothing to do with how a man turns out, be it good or be it
bad.
DE LACEY : I know you do not do bad things. You have a good heart. I know that.
CREATURE : Why my hungry?
DE LACEY : Eh?
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DE LACEY : I don’t know. Perhaps you are.
CREATURE : Yes! A king! Is my name? DE
LACEY : I don’t know.
DE LACEY : But I have taught you how to speak! How to read! There is hope. Who
knows what you may accomplish?
Creature (shakes his head): Hate me.
DE LACEY : Who does?
CREATURE : Men. Women. Childs. Dogs.
DE LACEY : No, they don’t.
CREATURE : Throw stones. Beat me. Everywhere! Everywhere!
DE LACEY : Peasants are ignorant people. They do not read like you and I. It’s an
instinct to protect the home, the family. Perhaps they are—frightened of you?
CREATURE : My look bad?
De Lacey is silent.
DE LACEY : Agatha?
CREATURE : Beautiful wife!
DE LACEY : Well, Agatha is beautiful, certainly—and Felix is kind. Let me introduce
you to them.
CREATURE : No.
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CREATURE : Snow! Snow! Snow!
FELIX : It’s all chopped—ready for the fire! It was lying at the foot of the fields.
Agatha carries two dead pheasants in one hand, and two dead hares in the other.
AGATHA : These were left by the stove—the hares already gutted! Not a mark on the
birds.
FELIX : Then how were they caught?
FELIX : Little people! Elves and sprites! (Calls.) Hello! Are you here?
Agatha (calls): Is anyone watching?
Now we see that the Creature is indeed watching from a hiding place.
FELIX : Come out if you are! We’d like to thank you! Come out!
The Creature is very tempted and almost steps out of cover. But something holds him
back.
They won’t come out.
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Agatha (laughs): There’s no one there, you fool. It’s just us. You see? We stick together
through thick and thin, and never stop loving each other—and magical things happen!
They kiss and exit. The Creature smiles happily to himself.
Months later. The Creature gives his arm to De Lacey, and they walks in the woods. It’s
evening—the light is fading. A single bird calls, as a huge moon rises.
DE LACEY : The evenings grow warmer. Soon it will be spring. There’s a cheery thought!
CREATURE : Why?
DE LACEY : Well—spring, you know! Ha ha!
CREATURE : Spring makes you happy? Why?
DE LACEY : Well, we’re still alive!
DE LACEY : Hear that bird? It’s a nightingale. That means it’s getting dark.
CREATURE : The bird makes the dark? That’s impossible.
DE LACEY : No, my friend, no. Don’t you remember your Milton? ‘The wakeful
nightingale…’
CREATURE : The wakeful nightingale! He
recites.
‘She all night long her amorous descant sung; Silence
was pleased: now glowed the firmament
With living sapphires: Hesperus, that led
De Lacey (approving): It is night in the Garden of Eden. Do you see the moon?
CREATURE : There. There it is.
DE LACEY : Describe it to me.
CREATURE : Solitary.
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DE LACEY : That’s a good word. Good.
CREATURE : And sad, like me.
DE LACEY : Why is it sad?
CREATURE : Because it is solitary.
DE LACEY : Why are you sad?
(Questioning who you are)
CREATURE : Because with all that I read, all that I learn, I discover how much I do
not know. Ideas batter me like hailstones. Questions but no answers. Who am I?
Where am I from? Do I have a family?
DE LACEY : You have us. My son will not turn you away, I promise you. Come along and
say hello to him.
CREATURE : No!
De Lacey stagger, and recover his balance. But he cannot see where he is. The
Creature keeps his distance.
DE LACEY : Ah yes, the founders of the ancient Rome—men who showed that the
world could be improved!
CREATURE : Why do men live in herds in cities? I cannot imagine a city. I cannot
imagine Rome! The numbers are too great.
DE LACEY : We band together to help one another, and do good.
CREATURE : But then you massacre each other!
DE LACEY : Yes, it’s inconsistent.
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to you on the wind? – I am the one who stands outside the door. I see inside. But I daren’t
go in.
DE LACEY : Yes. One day, though, you will find someone who will make you the
wealthiest man in creation.
CREATURE : Will I?
DE LACEY : Yes! A good man deserves it. You are a good man. Someone will love you,
whoever you are.
CREATURE : What is love?
A dream: the plains of Argentina. Hot blue sky and lush grass. A Female Creature,
constructed like the male, but physically very beautiful, sleeps in a nest in the grass. The
Creature enters, and kneels lovingly by her.
CREATURE: ‘Awake, my fairest, my espoused, my latest found, Heaven’s last best gift,
my ever new delight, Awake!’
She wakes. The Creature raises her to her feet. Music plays, and the female dances. It’s a
dance unlike anything you might have seen before.
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DE LACEY : But you have a memory, you have remembrance—
CREATURE : But how is it done? What is the process?
DE LACEY : I don’t know how it’s done!
CREATURE : Then how am I doing it?
DE LACEY : I do not know! You ran from a building? And this was in Ingolstadt? But
the author of this journal says he’s from—
CREATURE : Geneva. He says he’s from Geneva. (Reads from the front page.)
‘Victor Frankenstein, citizen of Geneva—’
DE LACEY : Frankenstein?
Felix and Agatha are approaching the cottage. Agatha is heavily pregnant.
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DE LACEY : These are good people, they are not like the others! I don’t know what
you look like, my friend, but I know there is room in the world for fellowship, room in
the world for love! Prejudice can be overcome! Stay! I will speak for you!
The Creature stuffs the journal into his pocket. He looks for an escape route.
The Creature is now trapped. De Lacey holds his hand. Felix comes in first, bearing
armfuls of produce from the fields.
FELIX : Father!
For a moment they remain still, as if spellbound. Then Agatha enters. She immediately
screams at the sight of the Creature.
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FELIX : Get away from him! You! Get away!
CREATURE : Gnaaaaagh!
DE LACEY : Stay!
AGATHA : Felix!
The Creature is driven out. He runs away. De Lacey has been thrown to the floor.
Felix (helping De Lacey up): You’re safe—we shan’t leave you again—
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DE LACEY (angrily): He was hungry! He did me no harm! Have you no compassion?
FELIX : It was a monster!
DE LACEY : No man is a monster!
AGATHA : But it wasn’t a man!
DE LACEY : What have I done? Dear God, what have I done?
The Creature enters carrying aloft a blazing firebrand. He dances a war dance. His
anger makes him inarticulate.
I know.
They plot.
They revenge.
I sweep to my revenge!
De Lacey, Felix and Agatha are consumed by the flames. They scream for help. The
Creature backs away. The cottagers burn.
By the shore of a lake. Snow-capped mountains in the distance. Several women enter at a
run. They are Elizabeth Lavenza, twenties, her maid Clarice, and housemaids.
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Elizabeth: Hide! Hide!
They run and hide, giggling. All exit as William, a young boy, enters. He wears a sailor
suit with a hat. He has the heels of hands pushed into his eyes and is spinning round and
counting.
William: What?
CREATURE : Where am I?
CREATURE : Geneva?
William: Yes, sir. The lake—can’t you see it? It’s there!
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CREATURE : The lake. How it glistens! – I’ve come a long way. Walking at night. Fish in
the streams. Do you fish?
William: Oh, yes!
CREATURE : What do you catch? What bait do you use?
William: I should go to my friends. We’re playing!
The Creature steals up behind William and holds him tight.
Don’t look!
William: What?
CREATURE : Don’t look at me!
William: I shan’t.
CREATURE : What’s your name?
William: William. What’s yours, sir?
CREATURE : You can be my friend, William. We could go hiking. We could climb those
mountains over there!
William: Climb Mont Blanc?
CREATURE : Yes! William:
Great!
CREATURE : Let’s go, friend!
William struggles.
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CREATURE : I will release you if you answer my question.
William: What is it?
CREATURE : I seek a man called Frankenstein. Have you heard of him?
William: That’s my name!
CREATURE : You? Frankenstein?
Suddenly very curious, the Creature lets William go. William turns, looks, and yells.
CREATURE : We must be friends, William. We’ll climb those mountains. Right to the
top. After you take me to Victor.
William: No! You’re revolting!
William: Yes, he studied there, he’s come home to marry Elizabeth, but he’s silly, he
never leaves his room! He’s missing everything!
CREATURE : You will bring him to me. Come.
William: No! I shan’t!
CREATURE : Come.
William: My father’s a magistrate! He’ll punish you for this. You’ll go to prison! Help!
CREATURE : Quite, boy.
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The Creature gags him. He makes off towards the mountains.
The same place, some time later. It’s now night. Servants of the Frankenstein
household enter, searching. They carry flaming torches.
They are joined by Monsieur Frankenstein, Victor’s father, and Elizabeth and Clarice.
Elizabeth: He was calling out – I thought it was part of the game! Oh, what has
happened to him?
VICTOR : William! William! – Divided into teams! You and you – come with me! M.
FRANKENSTEIN : They are looking. Everyone is looking. You may go home.
VICTOR : But William’s missing! How long has it been?
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M. FRANKENSTEIN : Victor, it doesn’t help anybody when you become agitated –
VICTOR : He’s my brother! Let me join the search! I must!
M. Frankenstein (sighs): Very well, stay. But please – keep close to me.
VICTOR : Why?
Servants: Over here! Monsieur Frankenstein! Look at this!
Elizabeth: I was hiding from him! How could I keep him in view?
VICTOR : But where were you?
Elizabeth: Well, where were you? Locked in your study, I suppose?
VICTOR : William was not my responsibility, he was yours!
Elizabeth: So you, have responsibility for – what, exactly?
M. FRANKENSTEIN : Enough! The villagers are saying – Clarice?
CLARICE : I know what’s up those mountains. Snow and ice. And a bit more snow and
ice. That’s all.
M. FRANKENSTEIN : Spread out! Keep looking! He may be nearby.
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Elizabeth: They’ve seen some kind of animal, presumably.
Elizabeth: Victor, you don’t look well. I haven’t seen you for weeks. You’re always up in
your room.
VICTOR : Why do you need to see me?
Elizabeth: We’re supposed to be getting married!
VICTOR : Oh, so I’m expected to –
VICTOR : But what if I haven’t got anything to say? What am I meant to do then?
SERVANT 1 : An open boat! But see – it’s drifting against the current!
Elizabeth: That’s impossible!
SERVANT 2 : Against the wind!
Elizabeth: Is someone pulling it?
SERVANT 2 : No, no one!
The Servants wade into the lake and drag a small boat back on to the shore. Everyone
runs to it. Victor climbs in.
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VICTOR : William!
Victor lifts William’s lifeless body from the boat. Papers torn from Victor’s journal flutter
from the body – diagrams and equations.
Victor passes William into his father’s arms. Clarice prays. Elizabeth is studying the
journal pages.
Elizabeth: What are these papers? Victor? It looks like your hand. M.
FRANKENSTEIN : Let me see. (To Victor.) Why, they are yours!
Elizabeth: Victor?
Victor suddenly turns and runs out. Elizabeth makes to go after him.
He bears off William’s body and all exit. The church bell tolls.
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SCENE EIGHTEEN: VICTOR, CREATURE
VICTOR : Are you here? Where are you? Are you here?
There is a sound like a great exhalation of breath, as the glacier shudders and shifts.
Through the snowstorm the Creature is suddenly visible, standing very still on the
ice. He makes a great leap towards Victor.
My God! Muscular coordination – hand and eye – excellent tissue – perfect balance!
And the sutures have held! I failed to make it handsome, but I gave it strength and
grace.
Victor circles the Creature. The Creature swivels to keep an eye on him.
My journal!
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CREATURE : Why did you abandon me?
VICTOR : I was terrified – what had I done?
CREATURE : Built a man, and given him life –
VICTOR : Well, now I have come to take it away –
Creature (laughs): Oh, have you?
Victor runs at him and attacks him with his stick, but the Creature swiftly disarms him
and throws him to the ground.
VICTOR : You killed my brother! You did it, not me! – I curse the day when you drew
breath. Since then I’ve lived in darkness.
CREATURE :
‘Is this the region, this the soil, the clime,
Said then the lost Archangel, this the seat
That we must change for Heaven, this mournful gloom
For that celestial light?’
Victor (astonished): That’s Paradise Lost! You’ve read Paradise Lost?
CREATURE : I liked it.
VICTOR : Why? You saw yourself as Adam?
32
CREATURE : I should be Adam. God was proud of Adam. But Satan’s the one I
sympathise with. For I was cast out, like Satan, though I did no wrong. And when I see
others content, I feel the bile rise in my throat, and it tastes like Satan’s bile.
VICTOR : But this is remarkable! You are educated! And you have memory!
CREATURE : Yes, I use it to remember being hunted like a rat, running from human
places, finding refuge in the woods. I use it to remember being beaten and whipped.
And I was good, I wanted to be good!
CREATURE : I wished to see you, and you came. Would you have come otherwise? If I
had killed half of Ingolstadt, would you have come?
Victor (subdued): Did no one show you kindness?
CREATURE : There was an old man. He taught me many things. But he was blind, he
never saw my face. He never knew I looked like this! After a year, after he’d described to
me the seasons, and I’d watched them go round, one, two, three, four – when I was one
year old, he said they’d take me in. The son, and his wife. A beautiful wife.
CREATURE : Sorry? You’re sorry? You caused this! This is your universe!
Victor is silent.
Frankenstein. Here is my request. I wish to be part of society. But no human being will
associate with me. But one of my own kind – one just as deformed and horrible – she
would understand – she would –
VICTOR : What, I –
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CREATURE : I want a female. Built like me.
VICTOR : A female?
CREATURE : You alone have the power to –
CREATURE : I will not torture you. I will reason with you. Isn’t that what we do? Have a
dialogue?
VICTOR : There is no dialogue with killers!
CREATURE : Yet you’d kill me if you could! Why, you have just tried! So why is your
killing justified, and mine is not?
VICTOR : I won’t argue with you! My God, I’m halfway up a mountain, debating with a
–a–
VICTOR : A nothing, a filthy mass of nothing! I am your master, and you should show
respect –
CREATURE : A master has duties – you left me to die! I am not a slave. I am free. If you
deny my request I will make you my enemy, I will work at your destruction, I will
dedicate myself, I won’t rest until I desolate your heart! (Pause.) I apologise. I did intend
to reason. I am capable of logic. I do not think what I ask is immoderate? A creature of
another sex, but as hideous as I am. If you consent, we’ll disappear for ever. We’ll go to
the wilds of South America, and we’ll build our little paradise, and live there in peace.
And no human being will see us again. What do you say?
34
VICTOR : Because your logic is flawed.
CREATURE : Is it?
VICTOR : You say you’ll go abroad and disappear, yet you also say you yearn to be
accepted by society. But won’t you grow tired of exile? Won’t you return, and try once
more to live among people, only to meet with their detestation? Because that is what
you will meet with. But now, when you run wild, there will be two of you, and double
the destruction. Why should I facilitate this?
CREATURE : Because I am lonely! Every creature has a mate. Every bird in the sky! Even
you are to be married! Why am I denied the comforts you allow yourself? A moment ago
you were amazed at my intellect, but now you harden your heart. Please, do not be
inconsistent, I find it infuriating! All I ask is the possibility of love.
VICTOR : Love?
CREATURE : Yes!
35
VICTOR : If you gave me your word that you’d leave here for ever, and never return –
never! If you were to swear, and swear solemnly –
CREATURE : I swear by the blue sky, by the white snow, by the fire of love that burns in
my heart, that if you grant my request, you will never have to look on me again, for as
long as the world turns round!
CREATURE : You are a king! The King of science! Build me a woman. Please! A
bride.
VICTOR : A bride should be beautiful. A bride should have pretty eyes, and shining
hair. She should not be hideous. She should be as lovely as possible.
CREATURE : Oh yes!
VICTOR : I will not repeat my mistakes. We can only go forward. We can never go
back.
CREATURE : Master, work your magic once more, I beg you!
Victor (thinking): A female…I haven’t ever considered the question. There are
differences of – what? – temperament? Humour? Skill?
Creature (happily): I don’t know!
VICTOR : What are females good at?
CREATURE : I don’t know!
36
CREATURE : A goddess.
VICTOR : Yes! If she was – indistinguishable from a – if she was perfect! Imagine that!
– I may be damned but I’ll attempt it.
CREATURE : You will comply with my request?
VICTOR : I will comply with your request. If you give me your word that, afterward –
you will leave us be.
CREATURE : I will! If you give me your word that you will do it!
CREATURE : Thank you! Thank you! My dreams come true! Go home and begin at once!
VICTOR : At home? I can’t do it at home!
CREATURE : Why not? What happens at home?
VICTOR : Do this work in my father’s house? No!
The Creature swiftly clambers away over the ice cliff, sure-footed like a goat. As
Victor watches him go, we once again hear the breath of the glacier.
37
The Frankenstein house, Geneva. Monsieur Frankenstein sitting in a chair and
reading a letter.
Victor bursts into the room. He has come straight from his encounter with the
Creature, and still wears his furs and boots. In his hand he clutches the journal.
M. FRANKENSTEIN : Victor! Where have you been?
VICTOR : In the mountains, on the Sea of Ice.
M. FRANKENSTEIN : This is a house of death. It is no time to go adventuring.
VICTOR : Father – I have to make a long journey. I leave today.
M. FRANKENSTEIN : Today! But what about William?
VICTOR : He isn’t coming. I must travel to England. Goodbye.
M. FRANKENSTEIN : England? Why?
VICTOR : Work.
M. FRANKENSTEIN : What work? For a year I have not seen you work! What is this
work for which you must decamp to England?
VICTOR : Look, I don’t expect you to understand, but –
VICTOR : Elizabeth will wait. I was in Ingolstadt six years. A little longer won’t make
much difference.
M. FRANKENSTEIN : Victor, why are you so sad?
Victor is silent.
38
M. FRANKENSTEIN : When your mother was dying, I gave a promise that I would see you
wed your cousin Elizabeth. That was my wife’s last wish – that you might be happily
married. You were such a sunny child, a carefree child, alert and inquisitive, the joy of our
days! I came to believe you would do great things, and I would be proud of you! Instead we
have this sullenness, this melancholy, this low fog of gloom. You flout my authority; you do
not respect the codes by which we live. In short, you disappoint me. If you insist on leaving, I
cannot stop you. But you may tell your fiancée yourself. (Calls off.) Elizabeth? (He turns
back.) Where is the boy I remember? He had bright eyes and a ready smile. Where is he,
Victor? Where has he gone?
M. Frankenstein exits. Victor waits. He hears again, distantly, the terrifying breath of
the glacier. Victor senses that the Creature is observing.
Elizabeth enters.
Elizabeth: Your father tells me you are leaving us. Why, Victor? Why must you go to
England?
VICTOR : Because in England they are at the forefront of electro-chemistry. I’ve
heard of real breakthroughs by vitalists, galvanists. I must go and see myself!
Elizabeth: And for that, you’ll put off our wedding?
Elizabeth: If you think I’m going to marry someone who talks to me like that, you can
think again. Which part might be beyond my scope?
VICTOR : All of it, actually.
Elizabeth: That’s hardly my fault. I wasn’t allowed to go to school! But I can learn. I
could be your assistant.
VICTOR : What is a Voltaic pile? A Leyden jar? Electric eggs?
Elizabeth: You know perfectly well I don’t know. What is a voltaic pile?
39
VICTOR : It’s for storing an electrostatic charge. You link several jars in parallel, and
with that you can –
Elizabeth: Oh, please, take me with you! It sounds so exciting!
VICTOR : I will go first to Oxford, and spend several months at the University. Believe
me, there’s nothing exciting about that.
Elizabeth: I don’t care! I’ll come.
VICTOR : I’ll be in the library all day.
Elizabeth: I’ll be as quiet as a mouse. Let me come!
VICTOR : Subsequently I’ll travel to the islands of Scotland – barren rocks in a barren
ocean. It is, I am told, and awful place.
Elizabeth: I don’t care! We’ll be together!
Elizabeth: What, and you think this is? The world is turning, and I’m sitting in
Switzerland, watching it! I know it’s picturesque, the mountains, the lake, but it’s so
quiet it’s oppressive, and the people are dull. I want to go to Paris, Rome, America! I
want to talk to you about your work, about the world, about music, politics, everything!
VICTOR : I have no interest in music or politics.
Elizabeth: Have you any interest in me? (Pause.) Victor, are you hiding something?
VICTOR : No!
Elizabeth: But there is something on your mind – and I believe I know what it is. I
believe I know what obsesses you.
Victor (alarmed): Do you?
Elizabeth: Yes, you have given too many hints, that you –
VICTOR : What? That I what?
Elizabeth: That there’s someone else.
Victor is fearful.
Victor, is there a girl in Ingolstadt? Are you in love with someone else?
VICTOR : No, no! I’m not in love with anyone else!
Elizabeth: But you are constantly preoccupied, as if you are yearning to be with
someone else –
40
VICTOR : No, it’s you, Elizabeth, it’s always been you! There’s no one else. I promise!
Elizabeth (relieved): Oh, Victor! I’ve been so alone, I’ve been lonelier since you returned
than when you were away! I see a rainbow or a sunset and I long to share it, but you’re
not with me, you’re never with me, there’s only one where there should be two. All I ask
is to come with you, and be at the centre of things. I want your gravity, your volume,
your mass – not an abstract – you.
VICTOR : Well, it’s not quantifiable, is it? I mean, what do you measure? The number of
kisses?
Elizabeth: You don’t measure anything. You throw yourself in. It’s like jumping from
the rocks into a swirling pool – you throw yourself in – you drown. You drown in love!
VICTOR : I see. You drown.
Elizabeth: May I ask you something? I want to have children. Do you want to have
children?
VICTOR : Yes, of course, I –
VICTOR : It will soon be over. Just let me finish my work. If only I could tell someone
about it!
Elizabeth: Tell me, please, tell me!
VICTOR : I can’t, I can’t tell anyone! I wish I could tell you, but I can’t!
Elizabeth: Then just kiss me. Like this.
She kisses him hard, and fondles him.
(Whispers.) Show me how you’ll give me children. Touch me. Feel my heat!
41
Must you go? Must you? Can’t you stay?
VICTOR : If only I could stay…! But I cannot.
Elizabeth: Then go, and do your work, and be brilliant! And after that come home to me,
and be my husband, and give me a dozen children!
Some weeks later. A tumbledown croft in the Orkneys. The weather is appalling. Two
crofters enter carrying a heavy trunk from a boat to the croft. They are Ewan, an older
man, and Rab, younger. Victor follows them.
Ewan (glaring at Rab): All right! – Where do you want it, sir?
42
VICTOR : Set it down there. Thank you, gentleman. Here’s the price we agreed. For the
porterage and three months’ rent.
Victor lays down money. Ewan goes to pick it up, but Victor stops him.
But I would be prepared to give you very much more, Ewan, if you could perform
another service for me. (Beat.) My field, you see, is human anatomy. The human body.
To progress my research, I require certain materials. This is an unorthodox discipline,
and somewhat disapproved of in academic circles. But you have my word that it is for the
public good.
Victor takes off his travelling cloak. He opens the trunk and, as they talk, he sets out on
the table various surgical instruments. Particularly saws and knives; galvanic batteries
and coils of wire; Voltaic pile, etc.
Ewan: Quiet, Rab. We don’t move in academic circles. (To Victor.) Go on, sir. It’s
illegal, I take it?
VICTOR : We are a long way from any court of law. The nights are dark. And in
science we keep our secrets.
Ewan: What is it you want?
VICTOR : Body parts. Fresh.
Rab: He’s a surgeon! I knew it! That’s grave-robbing!
Ewan: We are Christians in the Orkneys, sir. We don’t rob the dead in their graves.
VICTOR : But the dead are dead, aren’t they? They’re not coming back. I don’t subscribe
to the view that it’s unethical to use them for medical research.
Ewan: No, nor do we.
VICTOR : What will be possible in the future, eh, Rab? Shall we gain the upper hand
over sickness and disease? Have you any idea what we shall be capable of, if brilliant men
are allowed to do our work?
43
Ewan: Quiet, Rab! – I’ll do nothing on my own island. But what is it exactly that you’re
after?
VICTOR : Have you heard of any young woman who has died very recently?
Ewan (thinks.): Aye. On Ronaldsay.
VICTOR : Not your kin?
Ewan: No, not my kin.
VICTOR : Not diseased?
Ewan: Drowned.
44
Rab: There’s a bit sticking out.
You have strange taste, Rab, that’s all I can say. I find her terribly skinny.
Rab: I said the sister. The sister is fatter. (Darkly.) Uncle Ewan, what’s he going to do?
Ewan: I don’t know.
Ewan: As the man said, they’re dead. They’re not coming back. Ready?
Rab: Yes.
Ewan: Heave!
They pull the sack up out of the grave. Victor enters, in an oilskin, with a storm lantern.
45
Ewan: Quiet, Rab. Meat for the dogs. Nothing you’re not familiar with.
They exit, dragging the sack. The Creature emerges from hiding. He is soaking wet
from the rain, but untroubled by it.
Victor wears his surgical apron. His eyes are bleary. He yawns.
There is a knock at the door, and Victor hastily covers the Female with a tarpaulin, and
draws a curtain.
CREATURE : Frankenstein!
The Creature is high up in the rafters. He’s been there a while. William runs off. Victor
wakes from his dream.
Where is she?
46
VICTOR : She is here.
VICTOR : Wait.
Victor goes behind the curtain and reappears with the Female. He steadies her as she
walks under her own volition. She has minimal animation but apparently no mental
function.
Victor supports the Female as the Creature’s eyes widen with delight. He sinks to his
knees before her.
CREATURE : Your work is so detailed! The hairs on her arms – the curve of her hips!
The Creature touches her gently. The Female makes a slight movement in response.
VICTOR : How do I know what will happen – if I bring her fully to life? I didn’t know
how you’d turn out – how dangerous you’d be – how can I know about her?
CREATURE : Sir. If it has been possible for me to overcome my disgusting origins, and
transform myself into a rational being, she, my wife, can do the same.
47
VICTOR : And if she doesn’t?
CREATURE : But she will. I will teach her morality, as De Lacey taught me –
VICTOR : But you have sworn to live as an outcast. Supposing she prefers the town?
CREATURE : She has no choice, we go to Argentina –
VICTOR : But what if she refuses to accept a bargain made before she was even created?
Come on, use your brain. She might reject you. She might abhor the sight of you! She
might take one look at you and run – she might say she wants to live with a man, not a
monster!
VICTOR : But look at her! Look! Exquisitely constructed, don’t you agree? Look at her
cheeks, her lips, her breasts! Who would not desire those breasts? What if she leaves you?
What if she finds someone else? How will you feel if you’re deserted by one of your own
species, the only one of your own species, the only one you can take to your bed – how
will you react?
VICTOR : Because love is not something one can teach, not something one can
learn. Either you feel it in your soul, or –
CREATURE : Oh, master! I do! I love her! I do!
VICTOR : You’re telling me you have a soul?
48
CREATURE : I must! Say you believe me –
VICTOR : How does it feel, to be in love?
CREATURE : It feel like all the life is bubbling up in me and spilling from my mouth, it
feels like my lungs are on fire and my heart is a hammer, it feels like I can do anything in
the world! Anything in the world!
A heartbreaking moment in which it becomes clear that the Creature may be more
capable of love than Victor is.
That is how it feels. Bring her to life, and I will cherish her for ever.
VICTOR : Those are the words I was waiting to hear. You have shown me you have
some grasp of the emotion we call love. Now, be patient. I will complete her.
You can help me. We will not send her out in the world in this condition. We will dress
her – dress her has a queen.
CREATURE : A queen!
VICTOR : Go to the trunk. It contains some clothes – my fiancée’s. Select the finest, for
your bride. – Now, let me work. I’ll call you when you’re needed.
Victor exits with the Female. The Creature goes to the trunk, and opens the catches.
CREATURE : I’ll clothe her in lace and velvet. I’ll give her silks and pearls. I will walk
in the garden with my fair angelic Eve! I will be Adam, she will be Eve! And all the
memory of hell will melt like snow.
The Creature pulls from the trunk a dusty book. And another. There are no clothes. He
realises he’s been tricked, and turns to hear an unpleasant noise. He tears aside the curtain
to find that Victor is hacking up the Female with a cleaver. Victor scatters the limbs of
the Female. She’s utterly destroyed.
Waargh!
49
VICTOR : What do you know of the power of love? It is irrational, a pool of unreason! It
is anarchic, volatile, vertiginous, mad! Above all it is uncontrollable! Millions of you on
the earth? Coupling, procreating? No! You are the only one of your species – and that is
how you will stay!
The Creature sinks to his knees among the body parts.
The Creature grabs Victor by the throat. He begins to throttle him. There is a
hammering at the door.
Constable (off): Sir! Sir! Open the door!
CREATURE : Waaargh!
The Creature dashes Victor to the floor and climbs to the window.
Monsieur Frankenstein, a Constable and Ewan burst in through the door. Victor
collapses in his father’s arms.
50
VICTOR : Father…?
VICTOR : Father, I must be married at once. I must marry Elizabeth! At once! At once!
M. FRANKENSTEIN : Please, help me get him to the boat.
Ewan: Aye, sir.
They go to assist Victor. He breaks away and finds his journal, which he thrusts in M.
Frankenstein’s hands.
VICTOR : Take this. Take it! I want you to promise that you will destroy it!
M. FRANKENSTEIN : Your journal?
VICTOR : Destroy it, Father, burn it! No one must read it again! Will you give me your
word, your word as a magistrate? That this will be destroyed?
M. FRANKENSTEIN : I give you my word. Come home.
M. Frankenstein leads Victor out of the croft.
Servants:
51
On groom and bride.
Lift up your voice
Of Frankenstein.
Elizabeth kneels by her bed and prays. Victor enters. He has a pistol in each hand and
a wild look on his face. After him come two Servants armed with muskets.
Elizabeth: Victor!
VICTOR : Report!
The servants exit. Victor hastily drinks a glass of spirits. Elizabeth is considerably
alarmed.
52
Elizabeth: You did what?
Elizabeth: Yes. Yes I do. If you say you have made a creature, and brought him to life,
then – (Solemnly.) I do believe you, of course. (She burst out laughing.) What is it, like a
puppet?
Elizabeth: This is ridiculous. You are saying, you are telling me you have made some sort
of creature, with your electric eggs presumably, and it – what? It does what?
VICTOR : It pursues me.
Elizabeth: Victor, you’ve been very ill. – In Scotland you – you had a nervous
collapse.
VICTOR : Look. There is a – a thing, out there – and it wants to destroy me! I have
lured it here and now I must act – I must kill him before he kills me!
Elizabeth: What do you mean, you have lured it here?
VICTOR : I knew he would come for the – for the –
Elizabeth: The wedding? Did you send him an invitation? Victor! He wasn’t on the list!
VICTOR : Elizabeth – this is serious! Please believe me!
Elizabeth: You’re asking me to believe that you have created some sort of monster?
VICTOR : Yes, I –
Elizabeth: Why?
53
VICTOR : Because I had a vision, a vision of perfection. I followed nature into her lair,
and stripped her of her secrets, I brought torrents of light to a darkening world. I did it,
Elizabeth, I did it!
VICTOR : I have beaten death! I have done it! I have made a living thing!
Elizabeth: But if you wanted to create life –
VICTOR : That’s it, that’s exactly what I wanted!
Elizabeth: Why not just give me a child? We could have married years ago!
VICTOR : No, no, that’s not the –
Elizabeth: Because that is how we create life, Victor – that is the usual way!
VICTOR : I am talking about science –
Elizabeth: No, you are talking about pride! You have been trying God’s work – is that
what you’re telling me? And it has gone awry.
VICTOR : In you I found paradise. But the apple is eaten. We cannot go back.
Elizabeth: You’ve meddled with the natural order, and led us into chaos, because you
worship the gods of electricity and gas! What is wrong with you men?
VICTOR : I have guards all round the house. I will kill this thing that I foolishly made,
and then I will come back to you.
Elizabeth: Please, don’t go, hold me! Please!
VICTOR : Time for that when this is done. (Earnestly.) I will try to love you, Elizabeth.
Elizabeth: Victor!
Victor runs out.
Elizabeth has her back to her bed. The Creature suddenly springs from inside it, and
races towards her. He pins her arms behind her and clamps his hand over her mouth.
She struggles, but he is too strong.
54
CREATURE : Don’t scream! I will not hurt you. Don’t scream! I need your help.
Elizabeth: A genius!
CREATURE : My name? Oh, what luxury that would be! He didn’t give me one. Touch.
Elizabeth is scared. The Creature grasps her hand and puts it to his face.
55
What do you feel, Elizabeth?
Elizabeth: Heat.
CREATURE : Here?
Elizabeth: A heartbeat.
Elizabeth looks him full in the eye, and he removes his hand.
CREATURE : Madame, your husband is a good man, but he does not keep his word. If
you had a child, and it looked like me, would you abandon it?
Elizabeth: I’d never abandon a child.
CREATURE : Are you sure?
Elizabeth: I’m sure.
Elizabeth: He must learn that he has to take responsibility for his action, and that
CREATURE : Surely he desires you? On your wedding night?
56
Elizabeth: -- and that we must always stand up for the disadvantaged.
CREATURE : Oh, absolutely, give voice to the oppressed. Will you put my case?
Elizabeth: What is it you want?
CREATURE : I did not ask to be born, but once born, I will fight to live. All life is
precious – even mine. He promised to give me the only thing I lack, the only thing I
need to be content, but then he broke his word. I want a friend! That’s all! Elizabeth
(tentatively): I’ll be your friend. If you’ll let me.
CREATURE : Sit with me. I will not hurt you, I promise. I am educated, I know right
from wrong.
She stares at him intently.
He reaches out to take her hand. She takes it and he leads her to the bed. They sit side
by side.
CREATURE : Perhaps I am a genius, too?
Elizabeth (laughs): Perhaps you are. What are you good at?
CREATURE : I am good at the art of assimilation. I have watched, and listened, and
learnt. At first I knew nothing at all. But I studied the ways of men, and slowly I learnt:
how to ruin, how to hate, how to debase, how to humiliate. And at the feet of my master,
I learnt the highest of human skills, the skill no other creature owns: I finally learnt how
to lie.
Elizabeth: Lie?
CREATURE : Tonight I have met someone – perfect. Thank you for trying to
understand. But he broke his promise; so I break mine. I am truly sorry, Elizabeth.
Elizabeth: What do you…?
57
Elizabeth realizes just too late. She bolts for the door, but he springs on her, again
clamping his hand over her mouth. He drags her kicking back to the bed, where he rapes
her. She kicks and struggles but to no avail. He forces apart her legs and enters her.
The Creature lets out an awful, agonized groan, and his hand slips from Elizabeth’s
mouth, and she screams.
Victor!
VICTOR : Elizabeth!
The Creature looks up and sees Victor. Then he snaps Elizabeth’s neck. She’s dead.
No!
Leaving her lifeless body on the bed, The Creature springs up to the window. He
taunts Victor.
CREATURE : That was good!
The Creature laughs harshly and escapes through the window. Victor goes to
Elizabeth’s corpse and clutches at her. Clarice and the servants burst in.
CLARICE : Sir!
58
VICTOR : I can bring her back, Clarice, I can bring her back!
Quickly! I have the equipment, I can reverse the process – she is still warm and she has
lost no blood! Quickly there!
The Servants carry Elizabeth to the door, and Victor follows. Monsieur Frankenstein
burst in with Clarice.
CLARICE : Sir, you must prevent him!
M. FRANKENSTEIN : Victor, Victor, what have you done? You are still ill! Stop this at
once!
CLARICE : She’s dead, sir, quite dead!
What have you done? First William, now Elizabeth. Death is everywhere! Your mind is
disordered, it’s –
59
VICTOR : My mind is superb! It’s superb!
The Servants take Victor out. M. Frankenstein sinks to his knees and weep terribly.
M. FRANKENSTEIN : I failed.
The polar ice-cap, inside the Arctic Circle. A blizzard howls. A huge moon dominates
the scene.
The Creature wears nothing much, but he carries a sack. He is untroubled by the cold. He
addresses us:
CREATURE : My heart is black. It stinks. My mind, once filled with dreams of beauty, is
a furnace of revenge! Three years ago, when I was born, I laughed for joy at the heat of
the sun, I cried at the call of the birds – the world was a cornucopia to me! Now it is a
waste of frost and snow.
From his sack the Creature takes silver cutlery, a plate, a pewter goblet, a napkin. He
lays a place on the ice. He places strips of fresh meat on the plate, and fills the cup with
wine from a flask.
The son becomes the father, the master the slave. I have led him across the Black Sea,
through Tartary and Russia. I have led him past Archangel, and out on to the ice. We go
north, always north. His dogs are dead; his supplies exhausted. But we have a compact we
must keep: he lives for my destruction, I live to lead him on. (Calls into the wind.)
Frankenstein! Come! (To us.) I used to have dreams…I dreamt we were hiking, over the
mountains, under a glorious sky. We would walk together, and talk together… he would tell
60
me how to live. The mistakes to avoid. How to woo a girl. For this I came to find him, but he
turned me away! Why did he do that? Why did he turn me away?
Come! What’s the matter? Oh, are you cold? Do you feel forsaken?
Come, great explorer! Look – there is food. Seal meat! Explorer’s food!
Victor falls upon the food and devours it. The Creature squats and watches from a
distance.
You wanted power. Look at you. Immortality. Look at you. Why did you treat me like a
criminal?
VICTOR : You killed my wife.
CREATURE : You killed mine. Those who drove me from their doors they’re criminal!
– Oh, or are they virtuous Christians, and I an abortion to be kicked? Where’s the logic in
that? It’s insulting in it stupidity! What fool said prejudice can be overcome?
VICTOR : You have brought it upon yourself.
CREATURE : Have I? How? How did I? Did I ask to be created? Did I ask you to make
me from some muck in a sack? I am different, I know I am different! I have tried to be
the same but I’m different! Why can I not be who I am? Why does humanity detest me?
– The only one to show pity was Elizabeth. Lovely Elizabeth. I can still taste her lips, her
strawberry lips… I can feel her warm breast…her thighs…
Victor tries to struggle to his feet. But he is too weak and he collapses.
Up you get! We go on, on to the Pole! Let’s find the source of the magnet! Let’s make
some discoveries! What do you say? Bring light to the darkness! Up! Up!
Victor lies face down in the snow, still in his harness.
Master?
61
The Creature is worried.
Don’t leave me. Don’t leave me alone. You and I, we are one.
While you live, I live. When you are gone, I must go too. Master, what is death? What
will it feel like? Can I die?
Victor remains still.
Oh, Frankenstein. Will you forgive me my cruelty? Please forgive me. I am driven on, I
cannot stop. The moon draws me on. The solitary moon! We can only go forward, we
cannot go back. – Master! Drink! It’s good wine. Drink.
The Creature pours wine into his mouth. The claret runs into the snow. The Creature
weeps.
All I wanted was your love. I would have loved you with all my heart. My poor creator.
CREATURE : Good boy. That’s the spirit! Bring my miserable line to an end! Up! Up!
The Creature backs away. With a superhuman effort, Victor struggles to his feet,
heaves his sledge, and follows.
Come, scientist! Destroy me! Destroy your creation! Come!
They exit into the icy distance, the Creature prancing in front of Victor, who struggles
after him.
The End.
62